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From: "John R. Strohm" <strohm@ai*.ne*>
To: "David E. Smith" <dsmith218@ho*.co*>, "Trey" <trey@ne*.co*>,
     , ,
Subject: Re: Death of Eric Reichardt, 9/16/01
Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 06:44:27 -0500
David, if you cannot see that this fatality was 100% PREVENTABLE by nothing
more complicated than NOT LEAVING THE DIVE BUDDY, then there is no hope.

The guy is whining, crying, making excuses, and looking for the rest of us
to say "There, there, that's all right, you did your best", and absolve him
from his guilt.

Which is BULLSHIT.

We CAN'T say that.  If we say that, then we are also saying that solo diving
is OK, and preventable fatalities are OK.

Hello?  Ground Control to David?  Can you read me, David?

Dr. Henry Kendall died, diving solo at the Wakulla 2 project, on a Cis-Lunar
MK-5P.  Does this sound like a familiar scenario?

Every time a diver dies, the rest of the community owes him an analysis of
what went wrong.  In this particular event, it is very easy to see that solo
diving was probably a MAJOR contribution to the fatality. That is what Trey
was saying, in his inimitable fashion.

At the very least, if he hadn't been diving solo, he'd've been able to
recover the body, and the coroner would have been able to (a) do the autopsy
and (b) download the MK-5P flight recorder, and maybe figure out what went
wrong.  It was the flight recorder data that finally showed what happened to
Dr. Kendall.  It was the flight recorder data that showed what happened to
another Cis-Lunar diver, who ALSO died during a solo dive, on another
expedition.

Yes, the truth hurts, but maybe telling the truth will save someone else's
life.  Or maybe it will get him to realize that it could have been him who
croaked, whose loved ones would now be crying their eyes out.

----- Original Message -----
From: David E. Smith <dsmith218@ho*.co*>
To: Trey <trey@ne*.co*>; <MICHAELPIZZIO@cs*.co*>;
<FLTechDiver@mikey.net>;
<techdiver@aquanaut.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2001 6:50 PM
Subject: RE: Death of Eric Reichardt, 9/16/01


> I knew some asshole would respond to this
> in a manner inconsistent with the spirit
> I presume this post was made. I was
> wondering who would be the first.
> The views on solo diving have been made
> very clear on this list.  I see this as
> an informational post without any claim
> to procedures being good or bad.  Pretty
> sad to feel the need to jump on him.
>
> God Bless America!
> Hunt and Punish!
> Dead or Alive!
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Trey [mailto:trey@ne*.co*]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2001 5:26 PM
> To: MICHAELPIZZIO@cs*.co*; FLTechDiver@mikey.net; techdiver@aquanaut.com
> Subject: RE: Death of Eric Reichardt, 9/16/01
>
>
>
> You have to be kidding. This is nothing but one complete stroke talking
> about another complete stroke. Idiots like you two will continue to get
> killed, and will continue to prove me right.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: MICHAELPIZZIO@cs*.co* [mailto:MICHAELPIZZIO@cs*.co*]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2001 8:39 AM
> To: FLTechDiver@mikey.net; techdiver@aquanaut.com
> Subject: Death of Eric Reichardt, 9/16/01
>
>
> Fellow Divers,
>
> I am writing to report to you the facts that I have concerning the loss of
> Eric Reichardt on Sunday, 9/16.  Some have voiced concern that nothing was
> reported in the paper and no information was available concerning this
> tragic
> event.  However, as was reported here,  attempts to locate Eric with the
> USCG, BSO, area dive boats, and the kind assistance of other boaters were
> taken.
>
> I was the only diver who entered the water with Eric, and as such, I am
the
> only source of information concerning the events.  Eric was fully certifed
> on, and diving, a Cis Lunar MK5P Closed Circuit rebreather.  I was diving
an
> AP Valves Buddy Inspiration Closed Circuit rebreather.  We both had OC
> bailout and deco gases available, as well as all other normally carried
tech
> gear.
>
> The dive was on the wrecks of the RB Johnson and Corey and Chris, depth
> approximately 268 FSW.  This was my first dive with Eric, who was self
> employeed in collection of tropical fishes.  He had recently dove this
same
> wreck on the Cis Lunar and had seen a desired species, and he was
attempting
> to capture it.  I had planned to explore certain areas of the interior of
> the
> Corey and Chris.
>
> We agreed to drift into the wreck and go about our separate plans once on
> the
> wreck.  We had both 25 minute planned bottom times, with total run times
of
> 107 minutes and 121 minutes.  Eric was likely to finish deco first, as the
> Cis Lunar has onboard realtime deco capabilities.  I was carrying a reel
> with
> an enclosed bag inflated on the surface which I would tie into the wreck
and
> use to drift off of after the dive.  Eric was to shoot his own bag from
the
> wreck.
>
> Current on the site was 1.5 knots south, visability was about 40 -45 ft.
> Eric was carrying gear to contain the tropicals, which were positively
> bouyant, thus slowing his desent.  I watch him above me occasinally as we
> drifted into the wreck.  Entry time was 13:20.
>
> I hit the bottom at run time 1 minute and put my depth guage in the sand
to
> get a bearing on the wreck location which was not in view.  Depth was 268
> which meant that the wreck was slightly west of our location.  I took a
> compass bearing and swam at an angle westward, and looked up and saw Eric
> about 30 ft above me and slightly behind me, next to my line.  I did not
see
> him having any problems at this time.
>
> Decent time is a busy time for rebreather divers.  In addition to normal
> descent procedures, a rebreather diver has to monitor his PO2 readings,
add
> diluent to the counterlungs, change from low set point to high set point,
> etc.  Suffice to say, it is a high task loading period.
>
> Shortly after beginning to head west,  I caught a view of the stern of the
> wreck and swam hard for it, as the current was fairly strong.  I got up to
> the deck of the wreck, moved to the leeward side to tie in so as not to
> chafe
> the line on the superstructure.  I viewed my PO2 and systems, and noted a
> run
> time of 3 minutes.
>
> I then went back to the other side of the wreck to see where Eric was.  I
> did
> not see him, so I swam the wreck to the point of contact with the RBJ in
> search of him.  Though the visability was poor by Florida standards,  his
> large yellow rebreather would have been relatively easy to spot.
>
> I began to consider what could have happened.  My thoughts were that one
of
> three things were possible.  1.  Eric missed the wreck, surfaced for
another
> drop, or continued a "dirt dive" out of my sight.  2.  Eric saw a fish he
> wanted,  and went after it, as that was his goal.  3. He had a problem on
> the
> dive.
>
> I acted in a worst case scenario and began a full bottom search for him.
I
> began by backtracking to the area I had last seen him, with a difficult
swim
> against the current.  I then attempted to search other areas of the wrecks
> that were previously out of my view.  As the wrecks are 226' and 180' this
> is
> a large search area with this visability.
>
> At run time 16 minutes, I decided that he was not on the wreck, at least
to
> the best of my abilities in the search.  I believed that it was best for
me
> to begin an ascent for a number of reasons, and cut my deco obligation, in
> case he was injured on the surface.
>
> I sent up a second lift bag to notify the surface there was a possible
> problem.  I completed my deco and surfaced to find that Eric was not on
the
> boat.
>
> We immediately contacted the boats in the area, told them the situation,
and
> began looking for a lift bag.  We contacted the USCG and advised them of
the
> overdue diver, and were offered assistance by boats too numerous to
mention
> here.  My sincere thanks for all who tried.
>
> We identifed the areas where Eric might surface based on current and run
> time.  A full search effort was underway to include air support.  I
> requested
> permission from the USCG to do a SAR dive in the area where I felt Eric
> might
> be.   They were understandably hesitant to agree, but contacted superiors
> for
> permission.  I agreed to their terms as it was their scene at this time.
>
> At approximatley 18:50 the USCG stated they did not want me to dive, but
> reversed that decision shortly thereafter.  With the sun low on the
horizon,
> poor vis and low ambient light, I decided the dive would be fruitless.
> There
> were other factors, including support, stack time on the breather, diluent
> gas, etc.  I decide to try the next morning.
>
> I and a team of OC divers assembled this morning to attempt to recover
Eric.
> Dive conditions were very poor.  Current at the site was 3.3 knots south,
> and
> another dive boat reported 20 ft vis on the Miller Lite, a shallower but
> nearby wreck.
>
> We will attempt again tomorrow.  I will continue with this effort until it
> is
> accomplished.
> We have seen other tech diving fatalities, and the community has come
> together to recover the victims.  This is done mainly for the benefit of
the
> family, but also it is done for the dive community.  It is what we should,
> and will, do.
>
> I am sure that there are some who will second guess my actions on this
dive
> and I am amoung them.  All I can say is that, though we were diving solo,
I
> did the best I could.  Those of you that know me know that is is nothing I
> would not have done in efforts to rescue Eric, or for that mattter, any
> diver, had I been sucessful in locating him.
>
> My deepest condolences to Eric's family and friends, and my heartfelt
thanks
> to the many who have offered assistance and support.
>
> Regards, Mike
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