Interesting observations. It is amazing how the media can spin stuff. If the media had sympathized with Watson and called him the Schlep Who Got Railroaded After His Beloved New Bride Died While Diving, people would be taking up collections to help him defend himself.
But as far as being tried and punished, there was no trial. It was a plea deal in which a court of competent jurisdiction found that there was a factual basis (though heaven knows how) for his plea to manslaughter.
The only reason I'd like to see a trial is for the VERY SELFISH reason that I'd like to see exactly what the evidence is and what the experts who have analyzed the dives have to say about the dive data.
Guess I haven't been following closely enough, I thought he'd been tried. Seems like mostly a technical difference though, he plead guilty rather than face trial, is that what happened?
From what I've seen in this recent round, some of the media has tried hard to spin things more his way, and at least one of the most damning bits (the beeping computer), has at the least been called into question. Yet, it seems hard even then to favorably spin an eyewitness account of him grasping then releasing his dying bride, dawdling surfaceward, and his preposterous claims of physical inability to rescue his wife and his 'judgement' that sauntering to the surface to inquire as to assistance would be superior to just grasping her anywhere and applying a few pounds of thrust by any of a number of obvious and available methods. His subsequent actions topside could be attributed to shock I suppose, but they don't help his case in any event. That's what I recall of the reporting anyway.
Of course this is just a between-dives parlor game, but the storytelling required to exculpate him seems much greater than for the other supposition. While the inept diver caricature is a perennial favorite on SB, from what I recall of the reporting the evidence said otherwise, aside from the accused's lame sounding protestations.
It's not impossible that he made one of the all-time worst split-second panic decisions in diving history, it just doesn't seem like the best fit to me for the reported scenario.
I too would love to see a better presentation of the evidence, just not in the context of an Alabama trial. He was accused and the process ran its course, it should be over criminally.