Found in a FB forum. Posting here as it adds some details that may be useful the ongoing discussion.
“I did the forensic equipment examination for the Devon & Cornwall Police Dive Team for this incident. It was a JJ. The oxygen controller on that version of the product is in the handset. It intermittently failed, due to a flooded handset, and when it did fail and then start again you can see the PO2 drop. (this was done by Shearwater overlaying the data from a stand alone dive computer, the known dive profile, with the available data from the handset). On restart this controller defaults back to 0.7 set point. The oxygen controller worked for some of the ascent but it failed for the last time when the diver reached his 6m stop. As his deco ceiling cleared he descended to the bottom. The assumption is he went unconscious and let go of his SMB line. The chance of it being hyperoxia is minuscule as we know what the PO2 was for virtually all of the dive except for the deco stop and for that stop we know what the maximum PO2 could have been. Hypoxia fits the known facts. Either he didn’t look at his HUD or didn’t believe what it was telling him. As you go more hypoxic you do lose the ability to think clearly. Why didn’t he bailout, he had plenty of gas? Why didn’t he add lots of oxygen while at the stop? There’s only one person that knows the answers I’m afraid. I suspect that he was under the impression that his unit would keep going in the background, like a few other other makes would do, AP Visions and 2020s and the newer Megaldons for instance. Why else would he blindly continue knowing full well that he had a handset display that wasn’t working? At the start of his 6m stop the PO2 was okay, so no hypoxia issues then. The really annoying bit is ...the “super safe” GFs he used...he didn’t need to do that deco stop. When things aren’t going right, use 95-98 GF high then if everything is back under control add extra shallow stop time yourself but if things are desperate, get out and accept the very very slight increased risk of DCS. You can do this by using a 2nd dive computer set up with quicker GFs (90/98 for air diluent, 60/98 for Tx). You then have the means to get out quickly if you need to but can add safety by extending the last stop if everything is going okay.”