PfcAJ
Contributor
The IUCRR reports of yesteryear did not contain any 'opinion'. That's why they were good.
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There was an extensive debate about IUCRR reports in Cave Divers Forum a year or two ago. A representative explained why they had stopped issuing reports, and it was all about potential liability. They said their reports are available from the police through FOIA, but they would not be publishing anything themselves.
Investigating incidents like this can be very challenging. You will find that some people will be very, very tight-lipped, even refusing to talk at all. Some will give information that is possibly false. Why? Well, let's look at the latest incident at Ginnie. Some clearly think that one individual made a poor decision. You can talk about whether or not you feel a poor decision was made all you want in a public forum like this. You are protected by a variety of laws. Publish that opinion in an official report, and it is a different situation. Someone who may or may not have made a bad decision may describe things in a way that will make the decision not look so bad. Someone who may or may not have made a bad decision will be advised by an attorney not to talk at all. They certainly don't want an official report published that puts them in a bad light, and they will do what they can to prevent it. It is very frustrating to try to find out what really happened. When you are done, you cannot have complete confidence that what you believe to be true is really true, and you end up omitting anything controversial.
The IUCRR reports of yesteryear did not contain any 'opinion'. That's why they were good.
I'm no lawyer and my legal experience is limited to episodes of Law and Order, so this question may be completely irrelevant.
Wouldn't there be an issue if some facts were published by the IUCRR and then later determined to be inadmissible in court?
No one wants opinion, they want facts:
- found at xft of penetration in x tunnel
- backgas empty, marked 32%
- no stages
- scooter found xft away, operable
- buddy stated "x"
A plaintiff's attorney will get the info anyway, so part of the stated reason for not publishing is bull$#(^. They could get an agreement from the LEO organizations authorizing the publishing of limited info after some period of time has passed because honestly, who else is going to go in and haul out a body? If the community really cared, they'd chip in to pay for foia copies, but they're lazy (myself included).
A reasonable compromise is to publish a report every year or so with sanitized facts "person with full cave card found in unlined siphon system 800ft back with a bottle mislabeled 32%, actually containing pure argon". Sure, we could figure out the who, what where, but the stuff that really mattered would get to the community, and the org would have some deniability.