Cynon Valley

Man is jailed after dad died at golf course

- ROD MINCHIN newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A DAD drowned in a golf club lake after his childhood friend chose to pay him £40 a day to collect lost balls rather than pay for a £1,250-a-day profession­al diving team.

Company boss Dale Pike, of Glynneath, had one of his arms in plaster when he was supposedly supervisin­g his friend Gareth Pugh, 29, who had gone into the 2.4m-deep lake at Peterstone golf club, between Cardiff and Newport.

Cardiff Crown Court heard on Monday that 26-year-old Pike – who had founded Boss Golf Balls with his father Jonathan – was using unsuitable diving equipment, had ignored health and safety guidelines and could not supervise Mr Pugh properly due to the plaster.

He was also not qualified to dive either recreation­ally or commercial­ly and was not trained to supervise others diving.

Pike would pay golf courses 10p for every golf ball he collected and would then sell them online – charging up to £30.99 for a pack of 20 balls. Mr Pugh, a dad of one, worked for Boss Golf Balls on an ad hoc basis, earning up to £40 a day collecting balls.

The incident happened on February 11 last year while Mr Pugh was using diving equipment for the first time, which supplied air from a length of pipe attached to a surface compressor.

Prosecutor Philip Evans QC said: “The defendant was the only other person present and was supposedly acting as the ‘banksman’ keeping a lookout.

“But that was not effective because he had one of his arms in plaster. He realised he had not seen Mr Pugh for some time and the emergency services were called. By the time Mr Pugh had been located he had been submerged for 70 minutes.”

Pike had made inquiries with profession­al diving companies about what he needed to do to collect golf balls safely and was told he would need a qualified team of five people, costing around £1,250 a day, but he only wanted to pay £40 a day.

“There is evidence that the defendant knew of the risks and that this activity was governed by the health and safety regulation­s,” Mr Evans said.

“It is clear the defendant knew that the activities he was undertakin­g were governed by Health and Safety Executive rules and he chose to ignore them.”

Pike told prospectiv­e employers he had all the necessary qualificat­ions to run a company retrieving golf balls from ponds and lakes.

A health and safety investigat­ion found there were 16 breaches of regulation­s, including the fact that there was no risk assessment, Mr Pugh was not qualified to dive, he was not attached to a rope and the equipment he used was not suitable for the job.

“This is a case where many of the failings are stark and many of them were simply matters of basic common sense which this defendant chose to ignore,” Mr Evans said.

It is not clear what happened to Mr Pugh but he became detached from his face mask while he was at the bottom of the 2.4m-deep lake.

His body was found with his bag containing 341 golf balls. Mr Pugh had drowned.

At a previous hearing, Pike, of Chain Walk, Glynneath, admitted a charge of manslaught­er by gross negligence.

Judge Keith Thomas jailed Pike for 32 months.

After the sentencing hearing, Mr Pugh’s partner Mayree Worton said: “What upsets me the most is the bond that our daughter and Gareth had together is no longer there.

“I miss Gareth so much and I just wish we could have him back again – but I know that we can’t.

“The sentencing of Dale Pike is a relief – however it doesn’t make what has happened any less painful, upsetting, or distressin­g and it does not bring Gareth back.”

Iwan Jenkins, from the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, said: “There was clear evidence Pike had made inquiries with legitimate operators to cost this activity but he chose not to use them, instead falsely claiming to the golf club that he was a qualified commercial diver with his own equipment.

“Our thoughts are with Gareth’s family and friends and we thank them for their support throughout the legal process.”

 ??  ?? Boss Golf Balls boss Dale Pike
Boss Golf Balls boss Dale Pike

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom