Watson Murder Case - Discussion

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By BOB JOHNSON Associated Press (April 28, 2011)

Ala. judge keeps charges in honeymoon death case

An Alabama judge declined Thursday to dismiss capital murder charges against a man accused of killing his wife during a 2003 honeymoon diving trip to Australia.

Jefferson County Circuit Judge Tommy Nail denied motions to dismiss the charges against 33-year-old Gabe Watson in the death of his 26-year-old wife, Tina. Defense attorneys had asked the judge to throw out the charges based on double jeopardy, saying Watson had already served 18 months in an Australian prison after pleading guilty to manslaughter.

Deputy Attorney General Don Valeska said the charges against Watson are different in Alabama and are based on the theory that Watson planned the crime in Alabama in hopes of collecting on a life insurance policy on his wife.

But defense attorney Brett Bloomston said his client is being charged with committing the same crime. Double jeopardy is the act of trying a person a second time for a crime for which he or she has been prosecuted.

"It's a clear case of the same facts being tried in two different jurisdictions," Bloomston said.

Nail denied the motion, citing several cases where defendants have been tried once in a foreign country and later in the United States.

The judge also refused to dismiss the charges based on defense attorneys' assertions that Alabama prosecutors did not have jurisdiction to bring charges in the state.

Watson's trial had been scheduled to begin May 23, but it was delayed because of budget cuts in Alabama's court system.

Nail did not set a new trial date, but indicated he would like to see the case tried before the end of the year if the money is available for the security needed for a case that has generated so much publicity on two continents.


Nail withheld ruling on several defense motions until the start of the trial, including a request that jurors not be shown a video secretly made by Helena police of Watson removing flowers from Tina Watson's grave in a Birmingham area cemetery.

Valeska said jurors should see the video because "it shows the state of mind of the defendant."

Bloomston said the tape is misleading and does not show the many times Watson put fresh flowers on his wife's grave. He said Watson was removing artificial flowers that had been placed there by others.

"It (the tape) is simply being offered to inflame the jury. They are trying to show animosity toward his wife. That's not the truth. If he felt animosity for anyone it was the people who have been ... calling him a murderer," Bloomston said.

Nail said he would rule on the motion during the trial, but said at this time he doesn't "see the relevance" of Watson's actions at the cemetery.

Watson, wearing a dark suit, a blue shirt and a striped tie, sat quietly during the hearing, speaking quietly at times with his attorneys. He declined to speak with reporters as he left the courtroom. In the audience were friends and family members of both the defendant and of Tina Watson. Many of Tina Watson's friends were wearing purple ribbons streaming from a picture of the newlywed, who was married 10 days before her death.

Tina and Gabe Watson met while both were students at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. She died while the couple was diving on a century-old shipwreck on the Great Barrier Reef. Prosecutors claim Watson cut off her air supply, while defense attorneys say the death was an accident.

Both Bloomston and Valeska said they were pleased with the results of the hearing.

"The bottom line is we are prepared to go to trial and get Gabe before a jury," Bloomston said.

The state agreed not to seek the death penalty in exchange for Australia extraditing Watson.

Valeska said he wishes the judge had gone ahead and set a trial date, "but I understand the logistics. No one expected the courts budgets to be cut so much."

The judge also delayed ruling on whether to allow the jury to see a videotaped recreation of what prosecutors say happened during the dive.

Nail declined to issue a "gag order" prohibiting attorneys from talking about the case.

"This case has been talked about for six or seven years," he said.
---
(Posted under the "fair-use" doctrine of US copyright laws that allow copyrighted matter to be used without permission for reasons such as teaching and criticism of issues related to public health and safety; other discussion of fair-use on ScubaBoard.)
 
if the prosecutor offered and accepted a manslaughter plea...and the court went along with the prosecutor...it seems as if there was enough evidence to inject reasonable doubt at the prosecutors allegations that the accused actions were deliberate and intended to cause death and contained an element of depraved indifference at the consequences of his actions. He might have 'done it', but it seems evident that the prosecution did not want to take a chance the the defense could deflect the prosections efforts to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
 
From the Sydney Morning Herald, July 2, 2011:
Honeymooner's diving death 'an accident, not murder'
Jennifer Cooke July 2, 2011

Diving expert Carl Edmonds believes a 'grave injustice' may have been done in the manslaughter conviction of Tina Watson's husband, writes Jennifer Cooke.

One of the world's leading experts on diving deaths believes Tina Watson, an American whose honeymoon death on the Great Barrier Reef seven years ago sparked a controversial murder case, was the victim of a simple diving accident.

Dr Carl Edmonds claims "a grave injustice may have been done" in relation to Tina's husband of 11 days, Gabe Watson. He was charged with her murder by a Queensland coroner after a month-long inquest but served 18 months in jail after pleading guilty to her manslaughter.


Watson is now fighting fresh murder charges in Alabama related to his wife's diving death, after he was deported to the US last year.

Sydney-based Dr Edmonds, who co-wrote Diving Medicine for Scuba Divers, and has written specialist journal articles on more than 100 diving deaths, told the Herald that Watson's account to police of the events underwater on October 22, 2003, "all fits together very reasonably in a simple, straightforward diving accident".

Tina Watson, 26, of slim build, was "grossly overweighted" with nine kilograms of weights for her first ocean dive - more than twice what she needed with the equipment she was using, he said.


After analysing her husband's statements to police, together with other medical evidence and equipment reports given to the inquest into Tina's death, Dr Edmonds believes the novice diver did not inflate her buoyancy compensator vest - as all experienced divers would have done automatically - while descending to about 15 metres, above the wreck of the SS Yongala, south-east of Townsville.

This meant that when she reached the bottom of the descent line, Tina would have been "very, very negatively buoyant, like really, really heavy" and would have begun to sink - and panic.

Dr Edmonds said that a short press of the inflator button on her buoyancy vest, as Watson told police he had seen, would not have been adequate at that depth unless depressed for a considerable time. In her ensuing panic, Tina had probably over-breathed her regulator. This led to an intake of water, loss of consciousness and drowning, while her regulator remained in her mouth, according to Dr Edmonds.

After studying Gabe Watson's dive computer data print-outs, he said Watson's perceived slow ascent to the surface, in what was an emergency situation, could be explained. Gabe Watson had not ascended vertically, as did the master instructor who found Tina on the ocean floor several minutes later and got her to the surface from 27 metres in 90 seconds.

Gabe Watson, who had already drifted away from the wreck and the descent line, had ascended at an angle towards the line - as well as against the current - to shout for help. The 192 centimetre-tall, and bulky, former high school footballer "probably did very well to get to the surface in the time he did, [estimated at the inquest to be about two minutes]", according to Dr Edmonds.


In several statements he gave to investigating police, Watson said he had let go of Tina because she had dislodged his mask as he towed her, against the current, to the descent line. By the time he replaced the mask, he claimed she had sunk up to three metres below him. He gave differing versions of why he left her and went to the surface.


''If you listen to Gabe's story, it is very consistent with a really straightforward, panicking diving accident,'' Dr Edmonds said.

"It's all very plausible. In fact, it's like so many other diving accidents".

The emphasis by authorities on Watson's certification as a rescue diver meant "nothing", Dr Edmonds said, unless he had been trained to rescue overweighted divers in an environment similar to the ocean currents of the Great Barrier Reef.


With its changing currents, the Yongala site was an unpredictable "difficult, often dangerous dive", he said. Watson had learned to dive in the fresh, still waters of a flooded quarry in Birmingham, Alabama, and received his rescue certificate four years before his wife died.


Last November, after his release from jail, Watson was deported amid a political imbroglio, but only after the US gave assurances to the Australian federal government that he would not face the death penalty in his home state of Alabama, if convicted of the two counts of capital murder, with which he has since been charged.


Now 34, he was due to face trial last month. But significant budget cuts affecting court security in Birmingham have caused the postponement of his trial to perhaps next year.


US prosecutors allege that Watson planned his wife's murder in Birmingham for financial gain from insurance policies, and effectively kidnapped her by allegedly taking her to Australia on her honeymoon without revealing he intended to kill her.


Dr Edmonds is also the senior author of the international textbook Diving and Subaquatic Medicine which was cited several times during the month-long inquest, that ended in 2008, into Tina Watson's death .

He was contacted by investigators during inquiries into her death, but was not called as an expert witness. He suspects this may be due to parochial preferences for local Queenslanders - and for financial reasons.

Gabe Watson's former Townsville solicitor, Rohan Armstrong, told the Herald no contact with Dr Edmonds was disclosed to the Watson legal team.


Dr Edmonds says when initially contacted by investigators he "simply answered questions of fact saying what should happen, not what did happen'' in relation to issues including ascent rates in emergencies. He now believes they ''may have misinterpreted what I have said and applied it to him [Watson], when it really didn't apply''.


To adequately assess diving accidents, the police need not only be divers, but also divers experienced in investigating diving accidents, he stressed.


Most diving accidents and deaths "could have been prevented had someone acted differently", he said. And weights not being ditched occurred in about 90 per cent of them.


There was little chance of Watson getting his bride to the surface when she began to panic in the current unless he ditched weights, preferably hers, or inflated one of the buoyancy compensators, preferably hers, said Dr Edmonds.


But Watson did neither. Nor did he say he had panicked, as the Queensland Court of Appeal later found he did. This gave rise to allegations of foul play, compounded by different versions he gave to others of why he left his wife.


Another diver from a different boat had witnessed Watson from above as he appeared to embrace Tina, in obvious distress and moving weakly in a horizontal position, before he went towards the surface.


Tina's family were outraged by Watson's jail term and believe that the embrace was a "bear hug" that enabled him, motivated by greed for her life insurance policy, to reach under her arms and turn her air off from behind and then turn it back on again before she sank to the seabed.


Two months ago, another expert, Queensland veteran diver Col McKenzie, publicly retracted what he initially told police. Mr McKenzie now thinks Watson was incompetent and inept, but not a murderer. He had been presented with certificates and diver logs, not shown to him by police, which revealed Watson had little ocean diving experience.

Dr Edmonds believes Watson's murder charge and manslaughter jailing may be "a miscarriage of justice".
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Col McKenzie cited in the above article is the spokesman for the Queensland dive industry's trade association. McKenzie previously claimed -- and to this day never has retracted his claim, per Undercurrent newsletter -- that Mr. and Mrs. Lonergan staged their own disappearance or committed a double suicide. In contradiction to McKenzie's assertions, the Australian government determined that the Lonergan couple had been negligently abandoned at sea on the GBR, and that dive operator was fined; the Lonergans' deaths inspired the movie, Open Water.

A FREE PDF of Diving Medicine for Scuba Divers (351 pages) co-authored by Drs. Carl Edmonds, Bob Thomas, Bart McKenzie and by John Pennefather, can be downloaded from Dr. Edmonds' website -- something that EVERY diver should have for reference. Dr. Edmonds makes his CV available on his website, for those who may doubt his motives in the Watson case, or the scope of his knowledge.

It is my understanding of the events, per published articles cited on ScubaBoard, that immediately after Tina Watson drowned, Gabe was not a suspect -- he was not a suspect after the police questioned him. It was only when Gabe returned later to the police station (he had not been requested to return unless he had something to add), and Gabe raised doubts about the safety of the water conditions on the day of Tina's death, that local prosecutors began to build a case against Gabe. IF...IF this chain of events is indeed accurate (I cannot know for certain), many disturbing questions are raised about an industry, based in the USA, that continues to claim it is, "As safe as bowling," yet hides accident data behind Fifth-Amendment protection. Perhaps this was just a terribly unfortunate accident - however the tour operator was fined for violating their own safety protocols. Or perhaps Tina's parents are justified in their fury over the wrongful death of their daughter, but they've been focusing on the wrong target.
 
Thanks for the posts.

I'll add that in light of the verdict in the Casey Anthony case, unless there is significant evidence that has not yet been disclosed, it is unlikely that an impartial jury will find Watson guilty of anything beyond being inept (which is not a crime).

From what I gather, the jury in the Anthony case had reasonable doubts about her guilt because the defense was able to offer admissible evidence to explain away enough of the bits and pieces that the prosecution was relying on to prove she must have killed her daughter. The prosecutor did not even have to deal with evidence tending to show that Caylee's death could have been an accident.

Admittedly, Watson was present at and about the time his wife died and in theory he had a financial motive. However, apart from those, the evidence against him in connection with his wife's death is about the same as the evidence against him in nearly every other diver death.

Now that I'm wound up, let me posit the following cross-examination by the defense in the Watson case:

Q. You say you believe Watson turned off his wife's air supply. What evidence do you have that her air supply had been turned off?
A. She died even though she had air in her tank.
Q. Is there any other reason a diver might die while diving yet still have air in his or her tank?
A. Yes, but we eliminated those as possible causes of Tina's death.
Q. Is there any way to eliminate heart attack as a possible cause of death?
A. <Fill in the answer. ... I'm told the answer is "no.">
Q. Is there any way to eliminate overbreathing one's regulator?
A. <Fill in the answer. ... We all know that the answer is "no."?
Q. You say you believe Watson then turned his wife's air supply back on. What evidence do you have that her air supply had been turned on?
A. It was on when the dive master found her.
Q. Is there any chance that her air was on when the dive master found her, because it had never been turned off?
A. It is possible.
Q. Isn't it true that you need to believe that Watson turned his wife's air off and then back on because otherwise you'd have no case, whatsoever?
...
 
Thanks for the info.... interesting that Dr Edmonds was contacted and quoted but not called to appear. Also interesting that info on Gabe's dive experience was not viewed by McKenzie. Gabe's dive experience is something I have been asking about for a long time!
 
We still don't know if Tina had an air-integrated computer, which would provide some answers to Bruce's hypothetical cross-examination. :idk:
 
Honeymooner's diving death 'an accident, not murder'

So according to that article, she had more than double the weight that she should have been wearing. I don't remember reading this elsewhere, was this mentioned before. In my opinion, that is a very significant part of the whole situation. How much air would have been needed to make her negative?

I wonder how he was weighted, was he over weighted at all? Too much combined for 1 BCD?
 
Honeymooner's diving death 'an accident, not murder'

So according to that article, she had more than double the weight that she should have been wearing. I don't remember reading this elsewhere, was this mentioned before. In my opinion, that is a very significant part of the whole situation. How much air would have been needed to make her negative?

I wonder how he was weighted, was he over weighted at all? Too much combined for 1 BCD?
There may have been confusion over the weights in kilograms? 9 kg = 20#, so yeah that sounds like too much, depending on her BC & wetsuit. He didn't say what suit she was wearing so we are left to guess. Still, any BC could lift that I'd think if she had acted, or ditched weights as trained in OW class. This is a common mistake in fatalities but it would do to diver error. :idk:
...the novice diver did not inflate her buoyancy compensator vest - as all experienced divers would have done automatically...
Overly broad statement as sometimes we go in negative if there is a current.

Interesting read but short on facts and long on sensationalism.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/swift/

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