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This couple agreed to a "trust me" dive when they didn't question any of the poor advice that contibuted to the outcome.

Problem being, this advice was coming from industry professionals who should have been seen as the local experts.
Why not take the advice? They were probably certified by a very similar operation.

Also I see the lack of experience being enough reason for a checkout dive for proper weighting and to SAFELY assess their skills...

I'm guessing these divers thought they were being responsible and professionally cared for by a reputable company.

Incredibly sad and avoidable....
 
This couple agreed to a "trust me" dive when they didn't question any of the poor advice that contibuted to the outcome.

Problem being, this advice was coming from industry professionals who should have been seen as the local experts.
Why not take the advice? They were probably certified by a very similar operation.

Also I see the lack of experience being enough reason for a checkout dive for proper weighting and to SAFELY assess their skills...

I'm guessing these divers thought they were being responsible and professionally cared for by a reputable company.

Incredibly sad and avoidable....
If I give you a dive briefing and describe the easiest way to get on the boat, and you choose to do it some other way, one of us will learn something. Having gotten on the boat many thousands of times, I feel I'm pretty smart about that.

If you hire me to guide your dive, and I exceed your comfort levels, it's on you to call the dive, but as stated, they called the dive too late, and once the instructor took over managing buoyancy, the responsibility goes to all him.
 
A situation like this is one reason I don't bother to renew my professional certifications. When it becomes my legal responsibility to make sure that someone else comes back alive, I just have no desire to put myself in that situation.

That in no way means I would not rescue a diver, or try and intervene in an unsafe situation, but it's just not a situation I want to be legally required to place myself in.
 
If I give you a dive briefing and describe the easiest way to get on the boat, and you choose to do it some other way, one of us will learn something. Having gotten on the boat many thousands of times, I feel I'm pretty smart about that.

If you hire me to guide your dive, and I exceed your comfort levels, it's on you to call the dive, but as stated, they called the dive too late, and once the instructor took over managing buoyancy, the responsibility goes to all him.

It's my contention that the instructor had no right exceeding the skill level of one of his divers. Their needs were conveyed to the dive op who then under insulated them, overweighted them and then challenged their abilities at 100 ffw.
 
Another case of "I want to go scuba diving, not be a scuba diver". The couple thought they could skip the experience level needed to make that dive by hiring a "Guide".
Lots of bad decisions by everyone.
 
The lesson I learn from this incident is to not interfere with a panic diver if it’ll jeopardizing myself from the rapid ascent. This is not easy to do as the first instinct is to catch up with them (i.e., ascending at faster rate than them) & to try to slow them down before passing the safety stop.

I had a dive buddy told me about one of his dive buddies did similar rapid ascent for unknown reason, he tried to grab his dive buddy’s fins at depth & missed. His dive buddy survived the ordeal with a view blown alveoli and no longer diving.
 
This would be clear cut in the U.K.

The couple paid to go diving with a guide. It would fall under the Diving at Work Regulations. Not only would the guide be investigated, but the shop as well (being the contractor). A written risk assessment, plus a standby rescue diver are requirements.
 
@boulderjohn
I wrote "The Instructor had guided an Austrian couple ...". From my point of view it was clear that the dive wasn't part of a lesson but never the less a professional service.

I am aware of much of your reflections but the question of individualized sentencing is broadly different in each jurisdiction and even more in several contemporary legal systems. The same applies to the criterion of negligence and the figure of the guarantor position.

It was not my intention to have a discussion on that specific sentencing but on the incident itself and its consequences in general.
 
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@Wookie
This was a criminal procedure and the fine is a sentence. It has nothing to do with damages in this respective jurisdiction.
In case the woman would sue the dive shop or the instructor (subcontractor) the legal system for claims for damages or compensation would be badly different in the US compared to Europe (especially when influenced by the Roman law).
 
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