I had a feeling you might be interested in it for work. Quite honestly, I don't have any answers on that. I know when there is a vehicle that goes in the water, the P.D. calls us (F.D.). We do body/vehicle/weapon recoveries for the most part. I would think that if this happened in a big city the P.D. or F.D. (whoever runs their dive team in that particular city) wouldn't let you help because of the liability. The tow truck drivers just give us slack and we take the hooks out there and get the vehicle ready to pull out.
I'm assuming you know more about the smaller depts or certain situations where recoveries aren't necessarily routed through the police dept.. If that's the case, I'll just say that with very few exceptions the water in the lakes and rivers is pitch black after a few feet. We call it "diving by braille." Just for reference: I pulled a body out of the Trinity, which is constantly flowing, and the visibilty was 2" at 15 feet of depth. That is the best visibility I've ever had in the area lakes/rivers. If you're the slightest bit afraid of not being able to see, claustrophobic (even though you're not in a tight space), or generally creeped out by little things, don't even think about it. You're swimming in complete darkness, can't see your hand sitting on your mask, stuff bumping into you all over, fish nibbling on you, and finding things by bumping into them with your arms or head. Body recoveries are the worst, but cars that are sunk into the mud are almost as bad. You can't get under them, so you have to route the cable through the cabin to pull it out, and you don't know if you're going to bump into a body or not.
Don't want to totally freak you out, but that's the glamorous life of recoveries. If that doesn't sound fun, diving in the Caribbean is AMAZING. Visibility is 100' +, awesome marine life, beautiful water, no dead bodies....
I'm assuming you know more about the smaller depts or certain situations where recoveries aren't necessarily routed through the police dept.. If that's the case, I'll just say that with very few exceptions the water in the lakes and rivers is pitch black after a few feet. We call it "diving by braille." Just for reference: I pulled a body out of the Trinity, which is constantly flowing, and the visibilty was 2" at 15 feet of depth. That is the best visibility I've ever had in the area lakes/rivers. If you're the slightest bit afraid of not being able to see, claustrophobic (even though you're not in a tight space), or generally creeped out by little things, don't even think about it. You're swimming in complete darkness, can't see your hand sitting on your mask, stuff bumping into you all over, fish nibbling on you, and finding things by bumping into them with your arms or head. Body recoveries are the worst, but cars that are sunk into the mud are almost as bad. You can't get under them, so you have to route the cable through the cabin to pull it out, and you don't know if you're going to bump into a body or not.
Don't want to totally freak you out, but that's the glamorous life of recoveries. If that doesn't sound fun, diving in the Caribbean is AMAZING. Visibility is 100' +, awesome marine life, beautiful water, no dead bodies....
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