For the very last time, he did not intentionally provoke the animal that killed him, and the police have determined that from watching the videotape of the entire event:
As the article states, Steve Irwin was not as experienced with creatures in the ocean as he was with those in the outback. However, stingrays are ordinarily placid creatures and deaths caused by them are rare. Irwin swam over the creature, presumedly to pass over it, not approach it directly, and it felt trapped between him and the cameraman and defended itself.
If blame is to be laid, it could just as easily have been laid with the cameraman—he was in close proximity to the animal before Steve was. In any case, neither one of them could have predicted what happened. These animals are not ordinarily known to attack like that. It could have just as easily turned on the cameraman, except the cameraman was protected by the camera.
At the time of his death, Steve Irwin was filming a series called The Ocean's Deadliest—the stingray does not fit that description. He may have planned to refer to it with a voiceover as he passed over it in the footage, as all good documentary filmmakers do, but he would have no reason to focus on it in the filming that day because the animal was not a subject for the series.
Now, for the love of God, and for the sake of all reason and respect, please let that end of the argument for once and for all because it's gotten ridiculous. Whatever he did that was controversial in his lifetime, it doesn't matter anymore. The man is dead now.
An eight-year-old girl's heart is broken, as is her mother's, and a little boy will never know his father, because he isn't even three yet. His wife always knew that what they did together was dangerous work, and that was the life she chose when she married him. They worked together as conservationists, she was by his side for many years doing that dangerous, risky work with him and she supported him in it and believed in what he was doing, but that won't make her grief any easier, nor will it make it any easier for her to help her daughter through it.
If all you can do is be ignorant of the facts and blame him for his own death because of the risks he took in his life, then kindly keep your remarks to yourself. You only make them to be mean-spirited because you can't find it in yourself to be kind.
Would you appreciate people making these remarks about you after you were gone if your death was accidental, but people cruelly assumed you deserved it because you took risks in your job when you were alive?
Many, many people do stupid things that many of us wouldn't that lead to their deaths—extreme sports, walking high wires, scaling the sides of skyscrapers, skydiving, base jumping, etc. They weren't doing those for a cause like the conservation of animals—they were doing them for the sheer thrill of risking their lives. Those are the kind of idiots who truly have a death wish, because people like that really stand for nothing—they live for nothing but the brush with death and ultimately to die prematurely, and stupidly. These are people who really do cause their own death, but nobody deserves to die and it's grossly and inhumanly disrespectful to say, or even imply such a thing!
That's not even close to what Steve Irwin was doing—he was living his dream, the way he always did. What happened was an accident—a completely unanticipated and unprovoked accident—plain and simple. He did not intentionally meddle with the animal that killed him and there is film footage to back that up.
The time has come to accept that and end the arguments for once and for all with a respectful silence.
AP
Published: Tuesday, September 05, 2006
Steve Irwin was videotaped pulling a poisonous stingray barb from his chest in his last moments of life, officials said Tuesday, as tributes poured in for TV's Crocodile Hunter.
Police said there was nothing suspicious about Irwin's death and no evidence he provoked the animal. Irwin, 44, was stabbed through the heart on Monday while snorkeling with a stingray during filming of a new TV program on Australia's Great Barrier Reef.
John Stainton, Irwin's manager who was among the crew on the reef, said the fatal blow was caught on videotape, and described viewing the footage as having the "terrible" experience of watching a friend die.
"It shows that Steve came over the top of the ray and the tail came up, and spiked him here (in the chest), and he pulled it out and the next minute he's gone," Stainton told reporters in Cairns, where Irwin's body was taken for an autopsy.
Queensland state police were holding the tape as evidence for a coroner's inquiry — a standard procedure in high-profile deaths or those caused by other than natural causes.
Experts have said the stingray may have felt trapped between the cameraman and the TV star. Irwin, the popular host of Crocodile Hunter, rose to fame by getting dangerously close to crocodiles, snakes and other beasts. But Queensland Police Superintendent Michael Keating said there was no evidence Irwin threatened or intimidated the stingray, a normally placid species that only deploys its poisonous tail spines as a defense.
Stainton said Irwin was in his element in the Outback, but that he and Irwin had talked about the sea posing threats the star wasn't used to. "If ever he was going to go, we always said it was going to be the ocean," Stainton said. "On land he was agile, quick-thinking, quick-moving and the ocean puts another element there that you have no control over."
Parliament took a break from the business of running the country to pay tribute to Irwin, whose body was being flown home Tuesday from Cairns. No funeral plans were announced but state Premier Peter Beattie said Irwin would be afforded a state funeral if his family agreed.
Irwin's American wife Terri, Bindi and their son Bob, almost 3, returned late Monday from a trekking vacation in Tasmania to Australia Zoo, the wildlife park where the family lived at Beerwah in Queensland's southeast.
At the park, hundreds of people filed past the entrance laying floral bouquets and handwritten condolence messages. Khaki shirts — a trademark of Irwin — were laid out for people to sign. "Mate, you made the world a better place," read one poster left at the gate. "Steve, our hero, our legend, our wildlife warrior," read another. "I thought you were immortal. How I wish that was true," said a third.
The park opened Tuesday because it was what Irwin would have wanted, said Gail Gipp, an animal health employee.
Irwin was propelled to global fame after his TV shows, in which he regularly wrestled with crocodiles and went face-to-face with poisonous snakes and other wild animals, were shown around world on the Discovery Channel.
The network announced plans for a marathon screening of Irwin's work and a wildlife fund in his name.
"Rarely has the world embraced an animal enthusiast and conservationist as they did Steve Irwin," Discovery Networks International President Dawn McCall said in a statement.
Experts differed on the number of human deaths caused by stingrays — anywhere from three to 17 — though they agreed that they were extremely rare.
© Associated Press
As the article states, Steve Irwin was not as experienced with creatures in the ocean as he was with those in the outback. However, stingrays are ordinarily placid creatures and deaths caused by them are rare. Irwin swam over the creature, presumedly to pass over it, not approach it directly, and it felt trapped between him and the cameraman and defended itself.
If blame is to be laid, it could just as easily have been laid with the cameraman—he was in close proximity to the animal before Steve was. In any case, neither one of them could have predicted what happened. These animals are not ordinarily known to attack like that. It could have just as easily turned on the cameraman, except the cameraman was protected by the camera.
At the time of his death, Steve Irwin was filming a series called The Ocean's Deadliest—the stingray does not fit that description. He may have planned to refer to it with a voiceover as he passed over it in the footage, as all good documentary filmmakers do, but he would have no reason to focus on it in the filming that day because the animal was not a subject for the series.
Now, for the love of God, and for the sake of all reason and respect, please let that end of the argument for once and for all because it's gotten ridiculous. Whatever he did that was controversial in his lifetime, it doesn't matter anymore. The man is dead now.
An eight-year-old girl's heart is broken, as is her mother's, and a little boy will never know his father, because he isn't even three yet. His wife always knew that what they did together was dangerous work, and that was the life she chose when she married him. They worked together as conservationists, she was by his side for many years doing that dangerous, risky work with him and she supported him in it and believed in what he was doing, but that won't make her grief any easier, nor will it make it any easier for her to help her daughter through it.
If all you can do is be ignorant of the facts and blame him for his own death because of the risks he took in his life, then kindly keep your remarks to yourself. You only make them to be mean-spirited because you can't find it in yourself to be kind.
Would you appreciate people making these remarks about you after you were gone if your death was accidental, but people cruelly assumed you deserved it because you took risks in your job when you were alive?
Many, many people do stupid things that many of us wouldn't that lead to their deaths—extreme sports, walking high wires, scaling the sides of skyscrapers, skydiving, base jumping, etc. They weren't doing those for a cause like the conservation of animals—they were doing them for the sheer thrill of risking their lives. Those are the kind of idiots who truly have a death wish, because people like that really stand for nothing—they live for nothing but the brush with death and ultimately to die prematurely, and stupidly. These are people who really do cause their own death, but nobody deserves to die and it's grossly and inhumanly disrespectful to say, or even imply such a thing!
That's not even close to what Steve Irwin was doing—he was living his dream, the way he always did. What happened was an accident—a completely unanticipated and unprovoked accident—plain and simple. He did not intentionally meddle with the animal that killed him and there is film footage to back that up.
The time has come to accept that and end the arguments for once and for all with a respectful silence.





