The trial seeking $25 million for the drowning
death of famed underwater photographer Wesley Skiles
"was closely watched by underwater explorers throughout
the world," says the news organization Courtroom
View Network. It says the win by defense attorney David G.
Concannon representing Dive Rite, the manufacturer
of the rebreather used by Skiles and scored against
some of the most accomplished plaintiff attorneys
in Florida, is one of America's "ten most impressive
defense verdicts in 2016."
Skiles, a diver and cinematographer with more than
7,000 dives and 100 films to his credit, died during a
dive off Boynton Beach, Florida in July 2010 while filming
a documentary for National Geographic. His widow,
Terri Skiles, claims her husband drowned when oxygen
sensors and electronics on the Dive Rite "O2ptima"
brand rebreather failed.
But jurors took less than five hours to find the
rebreather was not defective and to clear Dive Rite of
negligence, product liability, and failure-to-warn claims.
Opposing sides debated during the 10-day trial
whether a defective rebreather or diver error caused
Skiles' death. His widow's attorneys claimed the
O2ptima sensors were defectively designed and subject
to malfunction when covered with water.
The defense countered there was insufficient evidence
proving a design defect caused Skiles' O2ptima
to malfunction during his dive. Instead, it argued
Skiles was an inexperienced rebreather diver swimming
on little sleep who made fatal errors during the dive.
Besides losing her husband and her lawyer's fees,
under Florida law, Terri Skiles and her attorney are
unfortunately liable for $670,000 in defense costs.