EXPENSIVE TRIP: The Florida diver who
feigned his death while diving for lobster
off Key West on August 8, 1998, has been
ordered to repay $55,000 to rescue crews
that searched for him in vain. Kerry
Stephen Scheele was in the midst of a
divorce and had taken out a $1 million
life insurance policy that named his
girlfriend as beneficiary when he staged
his death. He admitted that after entering
the water on August 8 he swam to shore,
ditched his dive gear in the mangroves,
and hitchhiked to his girlfriend’s house in
Wisconsin. Authorities arrested him after
he allegedly talked his girlfriend into
filing a claim on the policy.
CHEAP TRIP: Divers who dream of a
whirlwind tour of the Pacific should check
out Cathay Pacific’s month-long flight
pass, an “all-you-can-travel” option with
over 15 possible destination cities (plus
another dozen at upgrade prices). The
basic pass is $1099 for travel from San
Francisco, Los Angeles, or New York to
Hong Kong, and from there to destination
cities including Bangkok, Cebu,
Denpasar (Bali), Fukuoka, Jakarta, Kuala
Lumpur, Manila, Nagoya, Osaka, Penang,
Seoul, Singapore, Surabaya, Taipei, and
Tokyo. Australian/New Zealand cities are
$500 add-ons, and travelers registering
online get $100 off the price, those 55 or
older an additional $100 off. The 30-day
pass is good for weekday flights through
December 6, 2000 (5/15 to 8/15 travel
requires a $200 upgrade). More info
available online at www.cathay-usa.com or
by calling 800-233-2742.
DOWNCURRENT DISASTER: Three divers
died March 10 in a dive training accident
off the extreme northern part of New
Zealand's South Island near French Pass
in the Marlborough Sounds. Seven divers
working on their "master's certificates"
were on a boat operated by Nelson Dive
Centre in an area a local reporter called a
"notorious stretch of water with whirlpools
and strong currents." Reportedly a
float securing the divers' descent line
deflated, the line broke free, and the
divers were caught in a downcurrent that
pulled them into a 300' hole. Two divers
drowned and the body of a third has not
been recovered. The other four divers are
reportedly being treated for DCS. An
Undercurrent correspondent in New
Zealand reported seeing video footage of
the area showing ripping currents,
swirling eddies, and "conditions I
certainly would not dive in."