On November 30th, an American woman was
killed by a large tiger shark while on a diving trip in
the vicinity of Cocos Island, about 330 miles from
the Costa Rica mainland.
Twenty-six-year-old diving guide Jiménez said
that it was a female tiger shark that mauled the
49-year-old Rohina Bhandari, a Manhattan, NY,
private equity director, while she was at the surface.
The shark cut deep lacerations in Bhandari's legs,
and as well as in Jiménez's legs.
The shark had paid unwanted attention to the
group of divers as they made their way up to the
safety stop in the lee of Manuelita Island, ignoring
repeated attempts to drive it off. After the attack,
the panga crew managed to fend it off with a boat
hook, paddles or whatever they could grab, as they
pulled the injured divers aboard.
Despite a number of medical professionals
among the passengers of the MV SeaHunter, they
were unable to save Rohina from the effects of massive
blood loss. The vessel returned immediately
to Punta Arenas with her body, together with the
seriously injured Jimenez. Alan Steenstrup, Undersea
Hunter fleet's sales manager, said everyone was in
shock, but immediately had to focus on working
with the victim's family and the authorities.
Avi Klapfer, the owner of the Undersea Hunter fleet, told Undercurrent, "We are in the midst of caring
for the family, our injured dive guide, and the
crew's mental care. We are still investigating and
observing the tiger shark activity at [Cocos] island.
Once treatment is set, and all the details are clear,
we will put out a detailed account of the incident.
"Regarding social media, there is not much we
can do about tabloid-hungered individuals who
can't tell fact from fiction. Their tales are full of
mistakes and "expert" shark behavior interpretation."
This is the first shark attack on divers at that
remote location, known as "The Island of the
Sharks," and famed for its schooling scalloped hammerheads.
Only in the last decade have tiger sharks
returned to the Isla de Coco National Park as the
apex predator. During a visit in 2012, researchers
marked five specimens around 15 feet (4.5m)
long. Authorities have now imposed a moratorium
on diving around Manuelita Island, although tiger
sharks have regularly been sighted elsewhere at dive
sites around Cocos.
Meanwhile, the fiancé of the deceased woman,
plastic surgeon Dr. Jeffrey Rosenthal, blames the
Undersea Hunter operation for the fatality, for not
providing adequate protection. In an interview with
the New York Post, he said that neither divers nor
instructors (guides) had anything with which to
ward off sharks. "I feel that the safety precautions
they took were not as good as they should have
been," he said and seemed to be considering a lawsuit.
While seasoned divers know that there is virtually
nothing anyone can do to stop a tiger shark on
the hunt, we asked David G. Concannon, a Wayne, Pennsylvania attorney with vast experience in dive
fatality litigation, what kind of liability might be
presumed? In his opinion, not much.
"For several reasons: The death was not caused
by a fire on a vessel or something you can predict
and guard against. It was caused by an unpredictable
predator, which is known to hunt for food
near the surface. The diver was experienced and
obviously knew the risks posed by sharks, and Cocos
is widely known as a remote place that you go to
for diving if you want to see apex predators in their
natural environment.
"The case would be governed by the U.S. Death
on the High Seas Act (DOHSA), which limits damages
to funeral expenses and the value of services
the deceased provided to her family until retirement
at 67, reduced to present value. That means
you don't get any of the damages for things you
read about in the NY Post like pain and suffering,
fear, apprehension of death or punitive damages.
This is a small money case with all the emotional
damages removed. It's only about negligence and
numbers."
Despite the shock and fear generated by such
an event, the chances of being attacked by a shark
are almost negligible. Take into consideration
that the Undersea Hunter group has been operating
fully booked liveaboard dive vessels, along
with the Okeanos Aggressors, at Cocos Island for more than a generation. The original vessel, MV
Undersea Hunter, made 450 trips to Cocos over 26
years. Even discounting other vessels and operations,
that's a lot of divers who have enjoyed close
encounters at the "Island of the Sharks."
Add to that, regular encounters with tiger
sharks in popular diving locations such as Beqa
Lagoon, Fiji, and Tiger Beach in the Bahamas, put
such events into perspective.
In reality, it was catastrophic bad luck.
Nevertheless, we should not discount that we are
privileged visitors when we enter the ocean and
there are hazards associated with diving with any
predators.
Although dive guides at some locations are
equipped with "billy sticks" to push sharks away,
nothing can stop a determined attack, and it would
be foolish to think otherwise. Neither would it be
practical to issue divers expensive Neptunic chainmail
suits that would contribute considerably to
negative buoyancy, making them difficult to swim
with.
Some people on social media have advocated
that dive guides carry bang sticks to kill dangerous
sharks. Kevin Denlay, a well-known veteran
Australian diver with plenty of experience diving
with sharks, thinks that makes no sense. "In a place
like Cocos with many different species of sharks
about, a bleeding, dying tiger shark in its death
throes would have attracted a shark feeding frenzy
in no time at all, and then everyone in the vicinity
could have been in real trouble!"
Furthermore, the tiger shark is not the apex
predator at Cocos. In 2014, Edwar, a dive guide
from the Undersea Hunter fleet, along with others,
recorded a video of a tiger shark being hunted and
killed by an orca in the very same place that this
current tragedy happened.
While to us divers, the ocean seems safer than
big city streets, we are swimming with wild animals.
Anything is possible.
-- John Bantin