sun-sentinel.com/news/palm-beach/fl-palm-diver-death-20120910,0,5339481.story
[h=1]South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com[/h] [h=2]Experienced diver dies in Riviera Beach, deputies say[/h] By Ed Komenda and Brett Clarkson, Sun Sentinel
4:22 PM EDT, September 10, 2012
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An experienced diver unexpectedly died while diving near the Riviera Beach Marina with friends Sunday, according to the
Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office.
Donald Dessert, 66, of Palm Bay, surfaced from 15 feet of water with a group of fellow divers – but they knew something was wrong when he unexpectedly descended again.
Fellow divers grabbed Dessert, pulled him to the surface and got him on the boat, reportedly named "Narcissus." There, a diver performed CPR on Dessert.
Another called 911.
A Riviera Beach Fire Rescue crew then took Dessert from the Riviera Beach Marina to St. Mary's Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead just after noon.
Dessert, a retired Air Force pilot, was an experienced diver with an Advanced Open Water Diving Certification. The Sun Sentinel reached Dessert's immediate family by telephone Monday, but they did offer comment.
The cause of Dessert's death is unclear, but an autopsy has been scheduled by the
Palm Beach County Medical Examiner.
"We are simply investigating a death," said Teri Barbera, spokeswoman for the
Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office. "That does not mean there is any foul play whatsoever."
Hearing the story of Dessert's death, dive experts said it's hard to tell what went wrong Sunday morning.
"It sounds like something other than a diving accident," said certified scuba instructor Jonathan Dickinson, who owns Florida FreeDivers in Lake Park. "It could have been medical – but it could be so many different things."
A 2011 report produced by the Divers Alert Network at Duke University cited running out of air, entrapment or entanglement, buoyancy control, equipment misuse, rough waters and emergency ascent as some common factors of diving fatalities.
Drowning, air embolism and heart attacks are the principal causes of death.
But one-quarter of all diving deaths are associated with cardiac arrest, mostly in older divers, the report says. Older, previously certified divers may be at greatest risk, the report said.
Staff researcher Barbara Hijek contributed to this report
ekomenda@tribune.com, 561-243-6531, Twitter: @ejkomenda
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