Scuba Diving

SCUBA DIVING NEWS   ::   SCUBALINX   ::   SCUBA FORUM   ::   SCUBA POLL   ::   CYBER DIVER

Scuba Diving NewsScuba Diving CDNNScuba NewsScuba Diving Travel NewsScuba Diving Safety NewsEco NewsScuba Industry NewsScience

Dive News :: CDNNScuba Diving NewslettersCDNN Act NowCDNN Scuba Diving News PhotosScuba Diver AlertCDNN Scuba InterviewCDNN Scuba Diving Special ReportCDNN Scuba EditorialsCDNN Scuba Diving ArticlesScuba Diving Destinations

SCUBA DIVING PAGE ONE :: WORLD NEWS :: INDUSTRY

Accused UK scuba looters consider plea deal

Powered by CDNN - CYBER DIVER News Network

GALICIA, Spain (16 Mar 2009) — Deep sea divers from Truro, Falmouth and Helston, who face charges of plundering treasure from a Spanish shipwreck, are considering accepting a plea deal offered by the country's authorities.

The deal would see the three men receive a 12 month suspended sentence, fined in excess of £5,000 and left with a criminal record for a crime they insist they did not commit.

Professional diver and owner of Force 9 Salvage, Pete Devlin from Falmouth, electronics expert Steve Russ from Helston, and professional diver Malcolm Cubin from Truro are due to face trial in Spain on March 24.

The team has had the threat of six years in jail and huge fines hanging over their heads since 2002.

The Spanish government has now threatened to issue an international arrest warrant if they do not come to Spain to face charges, or plead guilty.

The team has been warned they would not receive a fair trail because of slanted local press coverage.

Father of four, Malcolm Cubin aged 38 from Truro, who is considering fighting the extradition request said that having the threat of jail hanging over his head has been "mental torture" for him and his family.

He said that they would like to fight the case as they are innocent but accepting the plea would draw a line under the whole affair.

Mr Devlin said that the only reason to accept the plea deal would be a financial one, however "galling" it would be to admit to something they were not guilty of.

Pete Devlin's Force 9 salvage company was issued with a Spanish government licence in May 2002 to recover 200 tonnes of tin ingots worth £650,000 from a shipwreck of the coast of Galicia, in north west Spain.

After recovering only one tin ingot, broken china, bottles the men were detained by officers from the Guardia Civil and questioned about gold and diamonds they had recovered.

A question, they say, which left them totally bewildered.

Prosecutors claim they had stolen the gold from nearby wrecks the Don Pedro and Palermo.

They were also charged with damaging Spain's "historical heritage".

Diving equipment, video recordings and computers worth thousand of pounds were impounded by police and the artefacts were seized.

The men say they were also interrogated over several days without lawyers.

Pressure group Fair Trials International has taken up the case calling it a "grave injustice".

A Fair Trials International spokesperson said: "The case seems to be one of conflict between the Galician government and the central government in Madrid over jurisdiction rights of shipwrecks in Galician waters."

 

CDNN RELATED NEWS

  • GREECE - Scuba looters destroying Greece's cultural heritage
  • GREECE - Scuba looters plunder nation's submerged cultural heritage
  • NEW YORK - Discoverers want HMS Ontario protected from scuba looters
  • WISCONSIN - History worth saving: 'Moonlight' to be protected from scuba looters
  • AUSTRALIA - HMAS Sydney find raises fears of scuba looters
  • AUSTRALIA - It's official: SS Alert shipwreck is now protected from scuba looters
  • AUSTRALIA - Government moves to protect SS Alert shipwreck from scuba looters
  • FRANCE - Scuba diving thieves fined for stealing artifacts
  • UK - Scuba looters desecrating underwater war graves
  • ITALY - UK scuba looters face up to four years in jail
  • MICHIGAN - Reward offered for arrest and conviction of scuba looters
  • PALAU - Scuba looters go to jail
  • FRANCE - HMT Lancastria shipwreck protected from scuba looters
  • UK - Government protects 17th century shipwreck from scuba looters
  • USA - Scuba diver wants Germany to pay for gyrocompass he looted from U-853 sub
  • PALAU - Scuba looters pay $40,000 after stealing war wreck artifacts
  • THAILAND - Royal Navy's last 'human torpedoes' tracked down
  • ALASKA - 'Abandon Shipwreck Act' aims to protect wrecks from scuba looters
  • PALAU - Scuba looters charged with stealing artifacts
  • FLORIDA - Key West scuba diver busted for looting Red Sea shipwreck in 1994
  • INDONESIA - BUSTED: Scuba divers face 10-year prison sentence for stealing shipwreck artifacts
  • MALTA - British diver fined for stealing shipwreck artifact
  • MALAYSIA - Scuba diving shipwreck looters stealing artifacts worth millions
  • CANADA - Locals blame divers for looting shipwrecks, desecrating grave sites
  • USA - Threat of jail time, fines forced scuba diving grave robbers to turn over loot
  • CANADA - Canada protects three shipwrecks from scuba diving grave robbers
  • MALTA - First ever prosecution of alleged underwater thieves
  • GREECE - New law opens access for scuba looters
  • NEVADA - Sunken treasures to be protected from scuba thieves
  • NORWAY - Underwater cultural signposts aim to stop scuba thieves
  • AUSTRALIA - Scuba thieves steal pearls worth $500,000
  • MALTA - Scuba diving shipwreck looters to be prosecuted
  • NORTH CAROLINA - Scuba thieves will pilfer shipwreck say experts
  • USA - Feds bust Boston Sea Rovers for stealing shipwreck artifacts
  • CANADA - Stuggling to protect historic shipwrecks from scuba thieves
  • MINNESOTA - Scuba looters main threat to historical shipwrecks
  • NORTH CAROLINA - Scuba thieves plunder rare unspoiled sub wreck
  • MASSACHUSETTS - Nantucket Lightship 117 signal bell looted by Boston Sea Rovers
  • MICHIGAN - BUSTED: Shipwreck thief ordered to return artifacts
  • ATLANTIC - Tourists, trophy hunters destroying Titanic shipwreck
  • AUSTRALIA - Diver returns historic shipwreck's missing bell
  • UK - Legal fight aims to protect war wreck from scuba divers
  • VANUATU - Scuba thieves busted with stolen WWII munitions
  • NEW YORK - Scuba looter Heinz Wahl wants to drop anchor tiff
  • NEW YORK - Scuba looter Heinz Wahl broke the law say state officials
  • UK - From riches to rags: UK treasure hunters take a dive
  • BERMUDA - Bermuda cracks down on unauthorized shipwreck diving
  • SCUBA FORUM

  • HAVE YOUR SAY - Discuss this article
  • ScubaLinx Scuba Diving Directory

     

    CYBER DIVER ALERT

    Shipwreck looters Leigh Bishop and Brad Sheard

    Partners in crime: Grave robbers Leigh Bishop and Brad Sheard. Following the lead of dive industry-endorsed shipwreck looters Bishop and Sheard, scuba diving thieves around the world are destroying historically and culturally significant wrecks for bragging rights, coffee table displays and internet auction profits that amount to a fraction of the revenue shipwrecks can generate as fully protected underwater museums.

    FROM THE EDITORS OF CDNN

    Despite dive industry 'take pictures, leave only bubbles' green-wash, a small but strident and criminal group of industry-promoted scuba diving looters steal artifacts from shipwrecks under the guise of 'archaeological exploration', and aggressively compete for bragging rights, product endorsements and profits from the sales of stolen artifacts that are now on a par with those from smuggling humans and drugs.

    "We do not care about Leigh Bishop and Brad Sheard's personality problems, their crude hate sites, their chat room antics nor their criminal attempts to intimidate, harass and blackmail responsible, eco-friendly dive companies that support full protection of marine wildlife, shipwrecks and underwater war graves," said CDS President Evan T. Allard. "Such unscrupulous and criminal conduct is beneath contempt and serves only to substantiate accusations that Bishop and Sheard have committed crimes and will continue to do so unless authorities step in."

    "The vast majority of the global scuba diving community opposes shipwreck looting and underwater grave robbing," said CDS President Evan T. Allard. "Shipwrecks are part of our historical and cultural heritage. For scuba divers, shipwrecks are fascinating underwater museums that must be fully protected for our children, our grandchildren and all future generations of divers who will dive deeper and longer thanks to ongoing improvements in diving technology ," Allard added.

    "It is absolutely imperative that the global scuba diving community, archaeologists, coast guards, police and tax authorities act now to prevent Leigh Bishop, Brad Sheard, David Morton (of the Boston Sea Rovers) and other shipwreck looters from exploiting and destroying sunken ships for their personal coffee table displays, internet self-promotion schemes, commercial 'museum' profits and tax-evasion scams."

    If you have information pertaining to the theft and/or sale of wreck artifacts, or desecration of underwater grave sites by Leigh Bishop, Brad Sheard, organized crime gangs or anyone else, please contact CDNN immediately and your information will be passed along to appropriate authorities.

    REPORT SCUBA LOOTER

    CDNN TOP NEWS STORIES

     

     

       ADVANCED SEARCH

    site map         ::         notice         ::         privacy         ::         about us         ::         faq         ::         my news         ::         advertise         ::         contact

    © 1995 - 2009  CYBER DIVER DIGITAL MEDIA NETWORK