Here are a few timelines from independant sources:
http://www.cyberdiver.net/cdnn/wavedancer/phdtimeline/phdtimeline.html
http://www.scubadiving.com/feature/news/102301phtornado.shtml
http://www.peterhughes.com/phwave/Iris.htm
http://www.soundingsonline.com/archive.story/1565.html
Sure, I'd like to see the report from the Belizean maritime authorities (due last Feb), but it appears that this report is being swept under the rug. The events of 9/11 have overshadowed this tragedy, so the mainstream press has never applied pressure to Belize or PHDI. In fact PHDI is operating once again in Belize.
In a perfect world, we'd like to have additional information such as:
1. Why did the Wave Dancer anchored at Lighthouse Reef and then chose to head to Big Creek (in the direct path of the approaching hurricane) rather than return to Belize City?
2. Why were the radios removed? The only reason I can see for removing the radios is to avoid alerting the passengers.
3. At sea, were the passenger informed of the risks and did they choose to "ride it out?" This seems unlikely given that the radios on the dive deck and in the kitchen were removed. Only the captain and teh crew would have known the storm's forecast track and intensity. One of the crew even left the Wave Dancer despite the threat of being fired.
4. Once at dock, with the knowledge that a category IV hurricane was going to hit, were the passengers informed of the dangers or the option to go ashore? This also seems unlikely. When the ship broke free from the dock, one of the surviving passengers reported that he went below to retrieve a life jacket from his cabin. If the passengers were informed of the impending danger, wouldn't those life jackets be on or near at hand?
5. How was PHDI involved in the decisions to move the Wave Dancer and inform the passengers? PHDI admits that the Wave Dancer was in contact with thier "land agent" who advised them NOT to return to Belize City becuase "the city was being evacuated and their was no place to take the passengers to sit out the storm in Belize City." Note: more than 20,000 people were evactuated from Belize City. I find it hard to believe that there wasn't room for 28 more.