The owners of Outer Edge, the
Australian boat that left two
American divers behind to die
(see Undercurrent, April, 1998),
will be charged in their disappearance.
The divers weren’t discovered
missing until 48 hours later
when crew members found some of their gear still on board.
Industrial Relations Minister Santo Santoro told a news conference
that prosecutors told him they could make a case against the dive boat
company and its management. “The two parties will be prosecuted as
soon as possible for alleged breaches of Queensland’s workplace health
and safety legislation,” Santoro said. Queensland state law carries fines
of up to $100,000 for a corporation and $21,000 or six months in jail for
company officials.
The charges would send an important message that Australia takes
its overseas visitors’ safety seriously, federal Tourism Minister Andrew
Thomson said. “It’s really the first duty of a country to look to the
health and safety of people who are so kind as to visit us,” Thomson
said.
While there is still no trace of the remains of Thomas and Eileen
Lonergan, a swim fin, a BC, a wetsuit hood, and a tank were later found
washed ashore.
That led the tabloid Weekly World News to claim that “scores of
crocodiles ate the pair alive,” but that comes from a rag that also carried a
story about a Georgia family that was depressed because mail order firms
are going out of business — the catalogue pages are their sole source of
toilet paper, and now they’re “really in a fix.”