SlugLife
Contributor
If my supposition is correct and the ATF is correct about how quickly this spread out of control, this illustrates why I've been harping on the notion that even if there wasn't a roving watch assigned, had there been one, would it have made a difference in the outcome
No one is saying that the night watch could've definitely prevented this. Simply that it might have. And because the captain neglected it the pax had zero chance of survival.
Putting these 3 together, "The captain is guilty of neglect which caused the deaths of the passengers" doesn't pass beyond a reasonable doubt (based only on patrols).In the three years I worked on small cruise ships for two different companies it was never like this. We would trade off every hour between lookout on the bridge and rounds below. You went, walked your route, punched the clock if there was one, and wandered back up to the bridge about 45 minites later and hung out. Each space got visited once an hour.
- Lets say industry standard for nearly all boats that size, to patrol each area once per hour, and that this patrol is obligated for safety reasons. (I'm not sure if it is or isn't to be clear)
- On average, a patrol would pass any area, where there might be a fire, on average 30 minutes after the fire starts (0 to 60 minutes).
- The opportunity to put out a fire, and warn passengers or crew is only in the first few minutes.
There's a chance it may have made a difference, but you'd have to be lucky in that 60-minute window.The underlying theme: If there had been a night watchman, none of this would have happened.
If I imagine I'm one of those scuba-divers n the lower-decks, and I want the best chance of getting out alive in case of a fire, what are my own top things in order?
- An integrated-fire-alert system, where a fire in one part of the ship notifies everybody. (Similar to most modern buildings, and many homes in the US)
- Adequate means of escape.
- Adequate and available fire-fighting equipment.
negligence
www.law.cornell.edu
Perhaps the strongest negligence by the crew, might be the lack of safety briefings and procedures. I haven't seen articles mention the prosecutor harping on "The passengers could have escape if they new where the 2nd exit was." That would be the most slam-dunk way to "hang" the captain, if the prosecutor could actually make that case.
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Legalities aside, I'll still keep harping on that cheap owner, because ultimately he's the one who caused the deaths of my dive buddy's 2 close friends. I don't have kind things to say about the crew either, but the prosecutor sure seems to have shown no interest in the one person most guilty.