That was my first question.
Also, with the fishing boat present, wouldn't there be an expectation of assistance from their boat due to the emergency?
Sorry, but I have to laugh and can't resist responding to this...
Are you suggesting the crew should have moved an unconscious non breathing victim, whom likely was already dead with no chance of being revived, from one vessel to another vessel in 10-12 foot seas?
That's a good way to create more victims or worse, sink both boats.
There's some serious Monday Morning Armchair quarterbacking going on here.
From all accounts, CPR was rendered. O2 was provided. The victim unfortunately died of a serious medical or serious dive related injury and barring a chamber or surgical room on the boat, there was nothing that was going to change the outcome.
People die. Even in the hands of the most qualified doctors. We have one account that the medical aid being rendered wasn't as good as what a customer could provide and so the customer provided it. Maybe the crew and staff new the victim was simply dead and an additional hour or so of CPR was futile. Maybe the crew was terrible at providing CPR, it appears CPR was still performed.
You know, I have my pro cert. for CPR w/ AED and there is no doubt CPR can save a life. Every diver should know how to do it, especially dive staff. But we also have to use some common sense here. Yes, there's some miraculous stories of survival from CPR. There's also the tons of stories you never hear about where the victim was revived only to be incapacitated and in a persistent vegetative state. I imagine shortly after the victim turned blue, that was it.