ItsBruce
Contributor
I've read the Tancredi case many times, sometimes twice or three times back to back. I have not read it in the last 6 or 8 months, however, so I'm not as fresh on it as I once was. And, I've read tons of other cases since. Much though I like all of you, I'm not going to re-read it tonight. So, I will go off memory.
Basically, what happened was that Tancredi, an inexperienced diver with an OW certification, but no deep diving experience, went on a dive charter that took the group on a 145 foot dive with a bottom time of 20 minutes. The diver charter did not assign a buddy to Tancredi. The other divers had buddies. During the dive, Tancredi had an OOA. The DM had used the last of his own air to fill a lift bag on the anchor, was also OOA and couldn't help him. The DM was able to share with another diver and surfaced. Tancredi died. In the ensuing lawsuit, the court found the dive charter and DM were negligent for: failing to ascertain whether Tancredi was qualified for the dive, not ensuring Tancredi had a dive buddy, exceeding the PADI maximum depth, doing a deco dive, doing a dive that left divers with very little air at the end of the dive, and for the DM using up his remaining air to fill the lift bag.
Although the court talked about the deceased as having made the decision to do the actual dive, i.e. not to sit it out or thumb it, the court also noted that once the boat had headed out to sea, the deceased really did not have much choice about the dive.
One thing that I noticed in the case was that the dive was not one where the charter simply served as transportation to a dive site where divers could do as they pleased after they planed their own dives.
And, I must tell you all, IMHO, the dive operator and DM in the Tancredi case were horribly negligent. It was almost as bad as if they had not confirmed that the deceased was even certified.
Now, changing topics slightly: Who here did not go deeper than 60 fsw before doing AOW?
Basically, what happened was that Tancredi, an inexperienced diver with an OW certification, but no deep diving experience, went on a dive charter that took the group on a 145 foot dive with a bottom time of 20 minutes. The diver charter did not assign a buddy to Tancredi. The other divers had buddies. During the dive, Tancredi had an OOA. The DM had used the last of his own air to fill a lift bag on the anchor, was also OOA and couldn't help him. The DM was able to share with another diver and surfaced. Tancredi died. In the ensuing lawsuit, the court found the dive charter and DM were negligent for: failing to ascertain whether Tancredi was qualified for the dive, not ensuring Tancredi had a dive buddy, exceeding the PADI maximum depth, doing a deco dive, doing a dive that left divers with very little air at the end of the dive, and for the DM using up his remaining air to fill the lift bag.
Although the court talked about the deceased as having made the decision to do the actual dive, i.e. not to sit it out or thumb it, the court also noted that once the boat had headed out to sea, the deceased really did not have much choice about the dive.
One thing that I noticed in the case was that the dive was not one where the charter simply served as transportation to a dive site where divers could do as they pleased after they planed their own dives.
And, I must tell you all, IMHO, the dive operator and DM in the Tancredi case were horribly negligent. It was almost as bad as if they had not confirmed that the deceased was even certified.
Now, changing topics slightly: Who here did not go deeper than 60 fsw before doing AOW?