'Hit-and-run' on the high seas: Hunt for speedboat driver believed to have ran over and killed a diver – as cops reveal skipper may have spoken to the man's friend moments after striking him

  • A manhunt is underway for the skipper of a boat believed to have killed a diver
  • Police are on the hunt for a skipper who may have spoken to the victim's friend
  • The diver died after he was struck down by a speed boat in Melbourne waters  

The skipper of a speedboat believed to have hit and killed a diver near Melbourne might have spoken with a second diver before leaving the scene, police said.  

Police are on the hunt for a speedboat driver after a 29-year-old diver was struck and killed about 1pm on Sunday in Victoria's Port Phillip Bay. 

Investigators on Monday pleaded with the skipper to come forward as they maintained a close watch of nearby boat ramps to locate the suspect vessel. 

Police are on the hunt for a speedboat driver after a 29-year-old diver was struck and killed about 1pm on Sunday in Victoria's Port Phillip Bay

Police are on the hunt for a speedboat driver after a 29-year-old diver was struck and killed about 1pm on Sunday in Victoria's Port Phillip Bay 

The Blackburn man, from South Korea, was skin diving with a mate when he was struck and killed in what a coast guard has described as a 'hit-and-run on the water'. 

The pair had been spear fishing several hundred metres offshore from Canadian Bay when the tragedy happened.

After surfacing from his dive, the friend made contact with a skipper from a nearby boat to warn them that the two were diving in the area - unaware his mate had already been struck.

Water police Senior Sergeant Alistair Nisbet described both men as experienced divers who were following the rules.

'They were using buoys and floats and flags, everything that's required to obviously display that they are swimming out in the water,' he said.

The victim's friend spoke with the skipper of a boat from the water before discovering his friend in distress, Snr Sgt Nisbet added.

'He'd surfaced and he'd seen that (those on the boat) were close by to where they were swimming and he just wanted to make sure that they could see where they were,' the officer told reporters on Monday.

After finding his friend with 'significant injures', he hailed a nearby commercial boat which ferried the pair to Frankston Pier where attempts to revive the victim failed.

It was too early to tell if the suspect boat was speeding, Snr Sgt Nisbet added.

There is a is five knot limit in Port Phillip Bay within 100 metres of diving flags and within 200 metres of the waters edge, a speed the senior sergeant described as walking pace.

A diver has died after he was struck down by a speed boat in Melbourne waters

A diver has died after he was struck down by a speed boat in Melbourne waters

They were picked up by another boat, who called emergency services about 1pm on Sunday

They were picked up by another boat, who called emergency services about 1pm on Sunday

It was possible the skipper did not know they had struck a person.

'They probably do know now,' the officer said, noting significant media attention of the death.

The accident happened offshore from Point Eliza, in the southern end of Port Phillip Bay.

Investigators shut down boat ramps in the bay following the accident, as they searched for the vessel.

'It's your responsibility as a vessel operator to ensure that you keep a look out for everything and operate safely. It's all responsibility back on the operator.'

Australian Volunteer Coast Guard spokesman Jeremy West said it was unlikely the skipper would have been unaware of the collision.

'It's usually fairly obvious that you've hit something, particularly a solid object,' he told ABC radio.

'In this case, obviously, a person is quite solid. Hitting anything on the underside of a boat will typically give the noise to suggest that something has been struck.'

Investigators have urged anyone who may have witnessed the incident or knows the identity of the driver of the boat to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.    

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Hunt for speedboat driver who ran over and killed a diver

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