The latest diving shocker happened on February 24, when
Austrian diver Markus Groh died from a shark bite while diving
from the MV Shear Water in the Bahamas. Rumors, hearsay
and theories abound about what actually happened but, as in
most matters involving police investigations and potential litigation,
no one is officially talking.
Here are the facts we can determine so far. Groh, a 49-yearold
attorney from Vienna, signed up for a shark dive trip with
Jim Abernethy’s Scuba Adventures in Riviera Beach, Florida.
The dive would be a cageless one and the goal would be to
swim with hammerhead and tiger sharks. The boat left West
Palm Beach and entered Bahama waters. Crew found sharks,
and passengers went diving. Groh was bitten by a shark and
brought up, bleeding. Crew called the Coast Guard, which sent
a helicopter to take Groh to a Miami hospital. Groh died after
he left the boat. The Miami-Dade County medical examiner’s
office concluded that loss of blood killed Groh, and ruled the
death an accident.
As soon as the news hit, rumors started. Groh was bit in the calf. His leg was ripped off. It was a tiger shark, no, a bull
shark. Scuba Adventures was reckless. No, they followed procedures,
it was medical error. Because no one on the boat is
talking, per orders by Abernethy’s lawyers, it can’t be publicly
determined exactly what happened, so everyone in the dive
community is forming their own conclusions. They’re also taking
sides – some say it was just a matter of time and that cageless
dives should be banned, while Abernethy defenders say it
was a freak accident and shark dives are the best way to save
the marine predators. Either way, Groh’s death emphasizes the
divides between divers, businesses and government.
Undercurrent contacted many sources to research this story.
Several declined to comment, so we relied on unattributed
sources and opinions from those not on the boat, and our own
speculation. But we do know that Groh’s death is promoting
closer scrutiny of Bahamas shark dives.
A source close to Abernethy, who was not on the trip, says,
“No one on the trip has come forward and won’t. But Groh was
not the target of an attack. A bull shark apparently pushed the baitbox on the bottom into him. It bit his calf, mistaking it for
the baitbox. Bite and release, no tearing of flesh. Groh eventually
went into shock and respiratory arrest. Although the bleeding
was stopped and he was resuscitated, he did not make it to
Miami alive on the Coast Guard helicopter.”
“Everyone Should Know What They’re Getting Into”
Abernethy has been making Bahamas shark dives for five
years and takes big names in marine biology and underwater
photography to “secret locations” on secluded Bahamian reefs
frequented by various sharks. His Web site states that divers
are recommended to have Advanced Open Water certification
with drift and deep diving experience, although the minimum
requirement for the trip was only Open Water certification with
“the necessary experience.” It’s not clear what Groh’s dive experience
was, but it’s surmised that Abernethy’s passengers had
plenty. Past guests say he gave two-hour-long briefings and sent
divers off the boat if he felt they weren’t up to par.
Past Shear Water divers are bonding to defend Abernethy.
Wetpixel.com has a page for testimonials from former guests.
So far, 147 people, many underwater photographers, have
praised his operation. The nonprofit group Shark Savers is
creating a petition in support of Abernethy and shark diving,
and sending it to the Bahamas Diving Association urging them
not to change current policies. It had 1,097 signatures in late
March. We recently called Scuba Adventures to ask about shark
dive bookings and were referred to two Bay Area underwater
photographers trying to round up divers for trips in May and
June – they now had seven open slots because some divers’
spouses had heard about Groh’s death and forbade them to go.
It’s understandable why shark-diving advocates are defensive.
Major media outlets highlighted the story, some playing up the Jaws aspect. Even the diving Web site Cyber Diver News
Network had a grotesque photo of a man in a bathing suit
with a bloody stump of a leg accompanying its story on Groh.
NBC’s Today Show host Meredith Vieira looked skeptical as filmmaker
Rob Stewart, who filmed his documentary Sharkwater on
Abernethy’s boat, defended shark diving.
Some Undercurrent readers also voiced strong opinions to
us. “What are we turning into, the nanny society?” asks Mary
Chipman (West Palm Beach, FL). “Anytime you suit up and
jump in the ocean, any number of things can go wrong and
you can die. Is it always someone else’s fault? In cases where
the operator was clearly negligent, then yes. But this is not one
of those cases. Add up how many people die in any given year
from true dive-operator negligence, then compare it to people
who died from being bitten by a shark in the entire history of
shark diving. Abernethy is quite clear on his Web site, everyone
knows what they’re getting into.”
“One of the only reasons why the Bahamas shark population
is so healthy is because shark-diving operations convinced
the government that it’s more profitable to attract shark divers
than it is to sell rights to Asian shark-finning operations to
decimate them, as they have in other parts of the world,” says
reader and Shear Water guest Bruce Yates (Seattle, WA). “I’ve
never met a boat captain more conscientious about safety and
more passionate about sea animals than Abernethy.”
But Abernethy is also a businessman, trying to set himself
apart from competitors by doing cageless shark dives - - and
the only ones with major predators. That draws more customers,
but still they’re hanging out with sharks drawn toward bait.
Scuba Adventure’s Web site says, “We will be chumming the
water with fish and fish parts.” Some dive customers told us
he doesn’t throw bait or blood but sets out sealed milk crates
filled with fish carcasses. But another diver claiming to know Abernethy’s trip details says he was starting to push it with
hand feeding. “Divers were getting really close to the fish box.”
“Sharks Are Turning Into Underwater Circus Animals”
Even if food was dangled in a bait box, sharks expect to
eat once they reach the scent. If they don’t get food from the
bait box, won’t they get frustrated and start poking around?
“Frustration is a human emotion, but sharks do demonstrate
they’re in an agitated condition when there is an olfactory sense
in the water,” says George Burgess, director of Florida Program
for Shark Research at the University of Florida. “If you merely
tease them with food, it’s like waving candy in front of a baby.”
Burgess credits Abernethy for doing trips away from civilization,
but he thinks divers claiming to do shark dives to protect
sharks are off-base. “What you’re getting is trained animals
used to humans being in the water and used to being fed. We
know they’re trained because they arrive before any food is put
out. Some boats rev their engines and say, ‘We’re calling in our
babies’. Sharks are attracted to the sound, just like Pavlov’s dog,
that dinner is coming. They’re the equivalent of underwater circus
animals. Their activities are not the behavior of wild sharks
but trained sharks.”
In the Bahamas and the Caribbean, unassisted shark sightings
by divers are becoming rare because sharks are disappearing.
Sharks also have a natural concern over unfamiliar things,
especially those near their own size. “Encountering humans is
an unusual event for them, so there’s a natural distance out of
concern, or respect,” says Burgess. “Once that natural behavior
is modified, it’s lost and that’s where problems begin. It’s akin
to problems with bears. But dive operators want to keep a lot of
sharks in one place for predictability – and deliver a product
for paying customers. However, divers are seeing an underwater
Disneyland rather than a natural world.”
“An Accident Waiting to Happen”
Groh’s death stokes a feeding frenzy among shark-diving
operations. Shark dives used to be done in Florida until the
state banned them in 2001. Although still officially based in
Florida, Abernethy immediately moved his shark dives to the
Bahamas. That must have irked rivals doing openwater dives
with more sedate reef sharks, feeling Abernethy was stealing
customers. In a letter last year to local dive companies, the
Bahamas Diving Association (BDA) told them to cease and
desist openwater, non-cage diving with potentially dangerous
sharks. Neal Watson, BDA president, confirmed the letter was
specifically targeted at Scuba Adventures, and was quoted in
the media saying Groh’s death was an “accident waiting to happen.”
But, as Abernethy defenders point out, Watson owns Neal
Watson’s Undersea Adventures in Fort Lauderdale and so is a
shark-dive competitor. Watson now refrains from media comments,
but an employee told us in late March that he was meeting
with the Bahamian government to talk about shark dives in
the Groh aftermath.
Michael Braynen, the Bahamas’ director of marine resources, told the Miami Herald that none of his government’s
agencies restrict any form of diving and he hadn’t heard of any
effort to change that. “It was an unfortunate accident, but it’s
not the first time someone has been attacked in the Bahamas
or in Florida.” Still, neither Braynen nor the Bahamas Ministry
of Tourism returned our calls. Sources close to Abernethy
think the BDA is trying to ban liveaboards in the Bahamas as a
work-around to banning shark feeds altogether, although that’s
doubtful as they’re also profitable for land-based dive operators.
Stuart Cove of Stuart Cove’s Dive Bahamas and BDA vice-president
wouldn’t comment on discussions, only saying that the
Bahamian government would be issuing a statement shortly.
“If You’re a Facilitator, Are You Also a Co-Conspirator?”
The Coast Guard and Miami police are investigating
Groh’s death, and there’s speculation that Groh’s family may
sue Abernethy. While sources in the press said Groh died en
route to Miami, another source says Abernethy recently told
him Groh died in the trauma center, and there is a suggestion
that medical malpractice may have led to Groh’s death. (Is this
the foundation for defense in a potential liability case?) But
like any dive operator, Abernethy had divers sign waivers, and
according to legal sources we talked to, they’ll hold up in court.
Florida typically holds that waivers signed by those doing highrisk
activity are valid because they are knowingly engaging in
the risky activity.
“Even though it basically says, ‘‘I give you permission to
be negligent toward me,’ courts will usually uphold waivers
in cases involving any kind of recreational enterprise,” says
Andrew McClurg, a tort law professor at the University of
Memphis. “It’s not a necessary service like medical care or education.
You can take it or leave it, you don’t have to go.”
However, he adds, courts only uphold these agreements for
ordinary negligence, not for gross negligence or reckless conduct
like leaving divers behind or filling tanks with bad air. “It
could be alleged that putting someone with sharks, blood and
chum is gross negligence, but it can’t be determined until the
court says what it is.”
Rick Lesser, an attorney specializing in dive cases, thinks
there could be litigation even though divers did sign releases.
He wouldn’t give details because he does work for Abernethy’s
insurer and may be asked to represent him, but says there are
shades of gray on either side of a high-risk sport outing. “People
do stupid things but if you’re a facilitator, are you also a coconspirator?
If you take willing hikers to a mountaintop in a
helicopter and then say, ‘Oh, it’s steep’ and the passengers fall
off the side, who’s at fault? They’re providing the mode but the
guests are signing a liability.”
We’ve long griped about PADI’s liability waiver and how it
makes divers literally sign their lives away. But McClurg says
small-business dive shops wouldn’t be able to survive without
putting exculpatory clauses absolving them of negligence
charges. “Some insurance companies give lower premiums to
high-risk businesses using exculpatory clauses, but businesses
have more interest in running safe operations so they don’t lose
business or be perceived as unsafe. Waivers just serve as protection
if things do go wrong.”
Undercurrent will follow any changes to Bahamas shark diving
and whether legal action is brought against Abernethy. In
the meantime, shark dives are still open for business in the
Bahamas. Groh may have been the only diver to have ever
died in a shark interactive feed, but he is not the only victim,
says Burgess. “There are ramifications that go beyond a diver’s
rights to see the shark. The dive industry and the Bahamas are
now under scrutiny. But the shark ends up being the biggest
victim in the end because this case underscores the erroneous
misperception of shark as killer. The blame should be on the
humans who attract them and provoke this type of incident.”
- - Vanessa Richardson