The IUCRR explained in a thread on Cave Divers Forum a few years ago that they were advised by counsel to stop publishing reports. They send the reports to the police department, and you will need to get them via a Freedom of Information request.
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My take on it is this. I'm considering getting a RB in 2017 or 2018. I need to make the decision based on very limited (and apparently closely guarded) information about rebreathers. Closely guarded because all the necessary information on what can happen etc is only presented to divers after they've made the decision and shelled out a truckload of cash for at LEAST a class and a rental unit if not purchasing a unit up front.
By now everyone has read that the family does not wish to have the divers name released, and so it shall be, but I want to provide our community with some facts at hand and perhaps help with the healing process for those who knew him. I was "on-scene" during the recovery process so what you are reading is going to be factual. Lets start by calling the team, Diver A and Diver B with Diver B being the one who did not survive.
Diver B was a long time cave diver, being certified Full Cave around the 97 time frame and continued his training in other disciplines such as stage, DPV, TRIMIX and CCR on the Optima. He had over 500 cave dives both here in the US and Mexico. Not sure of the number of dives on the Optima but his cert date was 02/15.
The dive plan was not at all complex and it was one that both team members had done before on several occasions. Divers scootered to 2150 ( in Ginnie ) dropped scooters and swam into Sweet Surprise to 3100ish ( Mainland Jump ) and at this point the dive was turned. Team spent just a few minutes at 3100 doing the usual "sightsee" stuff and then turned. Diver A leading out and B following. It would APPEAR that the events leading up to Diver B's passing, started on the exit out of Sweet Surprise. Diver A noticed that Diver B's movements ( trim, use of light, ect. ) were somewhat erratic but at this point, nothing that we all haven't experienced at some point. Back at the scotter pick-up point, it became totally obvious that Diver B was in "some kind" of distress. He had a lot of difficulty clipping the scooter on and needed help. Bouyancy was bad and motor skills were not as they should be. Team managed to scooter for 100-150 feet and Diver B indicated he could not manage the scooter and wanted to swim. In reality, no swimming was done at all, just drifting. Several hundred feet later, another attempt was made to scooter but it was also unsuccessful. At this point in the dive, Diver B had, for the most part. lost the ability to swim and was just drifting. There were numerous contacts with both ceiling and floor. Diver A could not do much more than attempt to guide the team out, plus he had both scooters. I would say that keeping the scooters was the right move because it was entirely possible that Diver B might overcome whatever the problem was and then the scooters would be a valuable tool. Diver A also is a long time cave diver and driving and towing a scooter would have been no big deal. At the 1000 foot marker ( maple leaf ) Diver B rolled off the gold line and down into the "pit" area near the Maple Leaf causing a total silt out of that area. It was about this time that Ted McCoy and his buddy were passing by that area and stopped and assisted in getting Diver B out of the pit and back on the gold line. It appears that by this time, Diver B had lost all capability to swim so attempts were made to tow/pull him out. As it was told to me, in just a very short period of time, it became obvious that Diver B had passed. Diver B was upside down with no reg in his mouth and even after numerous attempts to put the reg back in and purge and so on, nothing was going to help save Diver B. Diver B was clipped to the line and all other divers surfaced and a recovery team was formed and the body extraction was completed. We were allowed by the local law enforcement to do a "very short" inspection of all the gear and also to download the data from the Sherwater, which BTW, showed nothing out of the ordinary. No water in the canister either. The gear has been sent to a law enforcement facility for additional inspection and that's all I know about that.
I have been diving and teaching cave for close to 28 years and, unfortunately, have been thru this before, both in the water and surface support. A lot has been posted about the recovery and, of course, there are those who would have done it differently and have been very vocal about it. You people need to get a life! Doing a recovery is never a "planned event" and everyone involved did the very best they could so give it a rest. There are so many people to thank but as always, in the heat of the battle, you tend to overlook folks but believe me it's not deliberate. On the surface, Rose Meadows from Ginnie kept the surface support crew, ( including me ) under control and Ted and his crew deserve our gratitude for what they did and let us not forget Diver A. Losing a buddy will stay with you FOREVER.
I have nothing else to add about this terrible day. I hope the facts presented help family, friends and our dive community.
I will not make any public responses to questions/comments on this forum but I will answer all PM's should I get any. As some of you know, I live here and dive here and teach here, so I'm at the dive sites on a regular basis should anyone wish to talk.
Brent Booth
NSS 241
IANTD 38
Careful with the google as there are a few very out of date copies of that accident list that are being hosted. Better going to the source each time Deep Life Design Team: databases and analysis of rebreather accident datagoogle "RB_Fatal_Accident_Database" to pull up an Excel spreadsheet on rebreather accidents. You'll need to take some of it with a grain of salt given the authors basic assumptions and some educated guesses, but overall it's a good primer on how people die on rebreathers and the various models and failures involved.
Careful with the google as there are a few very out of date copies of that accident list that are being hosted. Better going to the source each time Deep Life Design Team: databases and analysis of rebreather accident data
Some more links of interest for those that want to educate themselves about how rebreathers work:
Deep Life Design Team: Design Submission for Open Revolution
Deep Life Design Team: Selected Design Validation Reports for Open Revolution Rebreathers
http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/xmlui/bitstream/handle/123456789/9902/a550047.pdf?sequence=1
and more generally because it is an excellent source Rubicon Foundation
https://www.diversalertnetwork.org/files/Tech_Proceedings_Feb2010.pdf
Scuba Diving Medical Safety Advice — DAN | Divers Alert Network
https://www.diversalertnetwork.org/...UHMSProceedings/2014_UHMS_Proceedings_WEB.pdf
How Does Your Rebreather Scrubber Handle the Deep?
and more generally because of the depth of his expertise rebreathers John Clarke Online
http://dhmjournal.com/files/Fock-Rebreather_deaths.pdf
http://spums.org.au/sites/default/files/DHM Vol43 No2 compact.pdf
and for the novice perhaps best of all Richard Pyle's learners guide LGRB