Update - Water Related Death East End
Update - Water Related Death East End
Published 2nd April 2015, 11:28am
It is with regret following the death of a 62-year-old American national on Tuesday, 31 March 2015 that RCIPS make the following statement and add clarity in the wake of a misinformed blog which appeared in the local media and has proven to be distressing to the family and in its parts, incorrect.
Victor Crawford a resident of North Port, Alabama, USA arrived on Grand Cayman on Saturday, 28 March 2015. He was aboard a local charter vessel Cayman Aggressor 4, in a group of 18 divers on a weeks dive.
In the dive area of Tunnel of Love East End, Mr. Crawford entered the water around 10:45am but on the group surfacing [divers] he was not seen and a search commenced. A request for assistance was done via VHF marine radio and a dive boat operated by Ocean Frontiers, Nautical Cat responded to the call for assistance. Around 11:53am the deceased was located floating face down in the water and was pulled onboard the vessel Nautical Cat, he was transported to the dock of Ocean Frontier, East End.
An ambulance was called at 12:00pm, responding from George Town, arriving at 12:42 pm. Mr. Crawford was examined by EMTs and found to be clinically dead by examination and verifying that there was no cardiac activity using an ECG monitor. This was reported to the Accident and Emergency (A&E) physician at the George Town Hospital. The ambulance as is normal policy was released for continued emergency deployment.
A funeral home was contacted and the body later transported to the George Town Hospital - this is a correction previously which stated that the body was transported by ambulance. There a physician certified death.
Contrary to what was reported, uniform officers remained throughout awaiting the arrival of the undertaker when the body was handed over. The police were reported to have left the scene, this related to one officer taking two witnesses, including the captain of the dive boat, away in order to provide statements for the investigation. I reiterate two police officers remained with Mr. Crawford throughout the time, until his body was handed over to the undertakers at the scene. Mr. Crawfords body remained on the boat and was covered out of respect.
Blogger Stephen Broadbelt - following the news release erroneously wrote, certain information that caused great distress to the family of the deceased and due to the sensitivity of this incident, RCIPS will be following up on the erroneous reports. The RCIPS has assigned a family liaison officer to the family of Mr. Crawford who will assist them on Island during these difficult times.
Detectives from the Professional Standards Unit (PSU) interviewed Mr. Broadbelt today and he admitted to officers that he was not present, nor did he personally witnessed what he reported on in his blog. He went on to say, that he was stating what was told to him by others. That approach regretfully, has caused added distress to the family and damage to the Cayman Islands and its emergency services.
Further Enquires continue into the circumstances of Mr. Crawfords death and a file is being prepared for a coroners inquiry.
Condolences is expressed to Mr. Crawfords family.
---------- Post added April 4th, 2015 at 04:27 PM ----------
This article starts out calling it a "downing death" but later says that the "diving death is still being investigated"
Alabama man's diving death causes Cayman Islands controversy | AL.com
Alabama man's diving death causes Cayman Islands controversy
By
Melissa Brown | [EMAIL="mbrown@al.com"]mbrown@al.com[/EMAIL] The Birmingham News
April 04, 2015 at 10:37 AM, updated April 04, 2015 at 10:43 AM
The drowning death of a 62-year-old Northport, Ala., man in the Cayman Islands last month has sparked controversy after a local dive boat operator claimed the man's body was mistreated by island authorities.
According to
Cayman News Service reports, Victor Crawford went missing on a March 31 dive.
The Royal Cayman Islands Police Service told CNS Crawford entered the water around 10:40 a.m. with a group of 18 divers, but his fellow divers could not locate him upon surfacing.
Police
told CNS his body was found in the water and a dive boat, operated by the Ocean Frontiers company, responded to a call for assistance.
The boat transported the deceased to a nearby dock, where paramedics took nearly an hour to get to him.
Authorities
originally told media Crawford was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was officially pronounced dead.
But a representative for Ocean Frontiers, the company whose boat assisted in recovering Crawford's body, wrote a lengthy comment on CNS's article stating he was "shocked" with the emergency services' response.
"The ambulance took over 1 hour to arrive on the scene and even after 911 was called, they called back to ask if we were sure and did we really need an ambulance," Stephen Broadbelt wrote. "To make matters worse, after the paramedics had assessed the body, they confirmed he was dead, got back in the ambulance and left, without the body."
After Broadbelt's comments, the RCIPS changed its original statement.
"...An RCIPS spokesperson said that an ambulance was called at 12:00pm, responding from George Town, and it arrive at 12:42 pm,"
CMS reports. "Crawford was examined by EMTs and found to be clinically dead. Verifying that there was no cardiac activity using an ECG monitor, they reported the death to the Accident and Emergency (A&E) physician at the George Town Hospital."
RCIPS confirmed Broadbelt's claim the ambulance left the scene without the body, but a spokesperson said the ambulance was dispatched for normal emergency service while uniformed police stayed with the body until an undertaker arrived.
Despite RCIPS changing their original story, a
spokesperson said authorities weren't "negligent" and allegations of mistreatment are "causing distress" to Crawford's family.
"I think it has done damage to the Cayman Islands by suggesting there is insensitivity about the way we deal with these issues, in particularly tourism," Commissioner of Police David Baines
told news service Cayman 27. "I've appointed a family liaison officer to deal directly to the family and when they arrive I will happily allow them to listen to the tape logs, see the evidence of the officers accounts because, as well as dealing with the loss of a loved one, they've suffered a loss of trust in the authorities and I need to recover that and show them the facts and the evidence of what actually took place rather than what's been put in a blog."
Crawford's diving death is still being investigated.
---------- Post added April 4th, 2015 at 04:33 PM ----------
Where was his buddy? How did he go missing?
According to the article below he was traveling alone, but they usually pair you up with someone.
http://www.compasscayman.com/caycompass/2015/04/01/Scuba-diver-dies-off-East-End/