I don't blame the resort guys for testing out their clients.
I was thinking of taking my boat out on the ocean with some diver friends, but I rethought it after a bay dive.
I had a group of 7 divers, some from our local college, who I took out on a trial dive. We loaded our gear and I motored up the bay and anchored in 30 feet of water in a slack/low exchange tide in a little cove. We were looking for crab. Oh my goodness!!! (put your own !@%$#%@ expletive in there).
You wouldn't have believed the bozo stuff people were doing, with one of the worse being a so called "divemaster" girl. After getting in the water and a equipment malfunction, she had to call her dive with a, "oh yeah, I've been having problems with the regulator". Another guy got in without his weights and another forgot to turn on his air. Anyway, being that it was in shallow water, it was hilarious - and eye opening.
Oh, and I decided to let the pros take divers out on their boat. Since this time, on a very limited - by invitation only, I have taken my boat out in the bay crab diving. Most of the time we jetty dive - what a blast!
Speaking of "Scuba Police". We do get looks from the Coast Guard when we get in with a brisk chop or are practicing smb releases. But only once did they ask, "Where's your flag?"*, when I popped up in the middle of the bay by a tourist/whale watching boat (on purpose

).
* Dive flags are not required in Oregon as dive flags in Oregon seem to attract boats to it, but in the case mentioned, I did have one in the distance on the jetty. We put our dive flags out on the jetty so that fishermen know we are down there and hopefully will go elsewhere and not snag us with a cast. For the most part, boaters stay away from the rocks, with a notable exception a couple of months ago where I stood on the jetty screaming at an idiot boater motoring towards us, to get the heck out of there as there were divers below. I did recover a freshly severed line and anchor that day - served him right!
