oldschoolto
Contributor
Jim, I see your point and I agree that CCR can be dangerous if used with less than the utmost care and diligence. However, three things ring through the posts you have been making.
a) you believe Peter Sotis was acting unethically
and
b) you believe Rob Stewart made some kind of newbie mistake
and
c) you believe that this is a diving accident
The complaint does not address #1 or #2 at all aside from pointing out that AH planned the dives. It does, however, address #3 because if you read carefully what is being said, it does not really argue that there was diving accident. It argues that there was a failure of proper procedure on board the boat by two companies and two individuals who should have been more on the ball than they were.
In other words, you keep coming back to what went wrong with the dive. What if you looked at it from the perspective that there WAS no dive happening when the accident took place? The dive was over. The divers were on the surface trying to get back on a boat. That's where things went wrong.
A number of years ago the shop where I was working had an accident during a guided dive. A diver was standing on a pier adjusting his weight belt and had a heart attack. When he collapsed he rolled into the water and it was investigated as a "diving accident" because he was dressed in diving gear and he was apparently in the water when he died.
Was it a diving accident? You tell me. Is it a diving accident when the dive is over and the divers are apparently safely back on the surface and trying to get on the boat, or is it a "boating" accident? What appears to be the tactic here is that the plaintiff wants this handled as a "boating" accident and wants to look at what happend on the boat that allowed one person to pass out and sink without anyone noticing it while at the same time they managed to save another person who was having (possibly) a similar problem.
You're blustering a lot about how this shouldn't have happend and how everyone involved are a bunch of idiots but if you look at it from the point of view of it being a problem with surface support and not a problem with the dive itself, then a different picture emerges.
R..
Well let's look at the few "facts" we may have... Rob has a Facebook page asking for a quicky CCR course and wants to start shooting film right away.. Looking for a short cut to what he knows is a very long learning curve..
Sotis has a known history of pushing the envelope and doing things that other CCR DIVERS think are foolish and dangerous.. He did train Rob in only a few dives before signing him off as a CCR diver and off they went to go deep down to film..
We don't know why Peter went on that last dive or why Rob went along.. Both of those moves were bone head and stupid...
When they surfaced Peter was in trouble and need help... Ron is said to have given the all clear I'm okay signal..
In the few seconds / minute that passed as Peter was pulled on to the boat.. Rob is gone.. why.. We may never know.. All he had to do was dump weights and go on his bailout bottle and inflation of his bc..As far as we know, He did none of these things..
This was not a boating accident.. As Rob was still in the water and not safely on the boat... The boat crew was working on the diver that had problems...As Rob said he was okay.. I don't see a problem with that.. Now Rob was not okay and should have never said it.. And his lack of knowledge and experience with the CCR is mostly why he is dead.. even if a boat crew member was watching over Rob.. It's my guess that Rob would still be Dead..
Sad the way it worked out.. But, there were some stupidity going on in Peters and Rob's dive training and making those dives that day.. And the last bounce dive that killed Rob and put Peter in a medical emergency...
Jim...