Fr J Hackett
Well-Known Member
I have quite a lot of sympathy for D Innes as well.
Law or not. He was not the only yacht charterer or sailing school engaged in these practices. He was the guy running the company where the accident happened. The Guys running the other companies got lucky.
No excuse or defence.
There is at least 1 Cowes based company currently advertising similar oppertunities on similar CAT 2 vessels. Even Yachtmaster Traineeships. This coming season.
No excuse or defence they might just think again in light of the prosecution.
If so it would be quite foolish. Trying to create law by precedent. You best have a damn good case or you will create the wrong precedent.
English law is based on precedent.
It was an individIual manslaughter charge not the company.
The option of corporate manslaughter would have been an option in that Innes was the guiding hand or controlling mind of the business but as it was a one man business there was little point.
The commercial shipping world has a long and very poor history of commercial gain for those at the top being more important than the safety of the vessel.
Going back to the early days of Lloyds. The Classification of ships was to protect the insurance underwriter. Not the ship or the crew.
Samuel Plimsol and his load line rule.
The Titanics life boats, She fully complied
The no of FOC ships lost with their crews over the last 3 decades.
The men with the money pulling the strings are almost never held accountable.
All irrelevant in this case the man responsible has been held to account and it may well have repercussions on standards and the industry and its practices.
There is a Law here in Canada Bill C 51. result of the Westray Mine Disaster. So far a case never been pursued.
Irrelevant he was prosecuted under English Law and the jurisdiction was within England
I think the MCA has been very agresive for some reason with the yacht segment. there have been a quite few prosecutions.