A February 17 trial date has been set for the year's most infamous dive. You may recall our June feature article
"An Underwater Attack Makes World Headlines," giving details of an underwater encounter off Hawaii's Kona
coast on May 8 between marine activist Rene Umberger and fish collector Jay Lovell. Umberger, who has written for
Undercurrent about the bad practices used to collect Hawaii fish for the aquarium trade, and two other divers were
using cameras to film fish collectors plying their trade, and when Lovell saw them filming him collecting fish, he
finned toward Umberger and pulled the regulator out of her mouth.
Authorities charged Lovell with a misdemeanor of second-degree terroristic threatening, to which he pleaded
not guilty in September. Lovell didn't speak during the brief arraignment, but his attorney, Evans Smith, objected to
a media request for extended coverage, which would allow a camera in the courtroom, then requested the case be
taken to trial.
After the arraignment, Smith told West Hawaii Today that Lovell was actually the one under threat, being surrounded
by six strangers, who blocked his route back to the surface, and when he got back on land, he immediately
reported the incident to authorities. "He's not the criminal here," Smith said.
Oh, really? Who was the only diver down there to rip a regulator out of someone's mouth?