Disappearance of Ben McDaniel

30°46′17″N 85°56′53″W / 30.77149°N 85.94812°W / 30.77149; -85.94812

Benjamin J. McDaniel
A smiling man with short brownish hair and ruddy cheeks smiling and wearing a dark blue wetsuit
McDaniel in diving gear
Born(1980-04-15)April 15, 1980
DisappearedAugust 18, 2010 (aged 30)
Vortex Spring, Florida
StatusMissing for 14 years, 1 month and 19 days
Known forDisappearance while scuba diving

On August 20, 2010, Ben McDaniel (born April 15, 1980), of Memphis, Tennessee, United States, was reported missing after employees in the dive shop at Vortex Spring, north of Ponce de Leon, Florida, noticed that his pickup truck had remained in the shop's parking lot for the previous two days. McDaniel, who had been diving regularly at the spring while living in his parents' nearby beach house, had last been seen by two of those employees on the evening of August 18, on a dive entering a cave 58 feet (18 m) below the water's surface. While he was initially believed to have drowned on that dive, and his parents still strongly believe his body is in an inaccessible reach of the extensive cave system, no trace of him has ever been found.[1][2] The state of Florida issued his family a death certificate in 2013.[3]

McDaniel had been living at his parents' beach house on the Emerald Coast during a sabbatical in the wake of a divorce, a business failure, and the death of his younger brother two years earlier. An avid diver since his teens, he had been a regular at the spring, where he had apparently been covertly exploring the cave despite lacking the required certification. Lengthy searches have only located some anomalously placed and filled decompression tanks; many of the divers who took part in those searches believe that if McDaniel is indeed dead, his body is not in the cave as he was too large to enter its narrower passages. The McDaniels devoted their family's extensive financial resources to the search, at one point guaranteeing the replacement cost of a remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV).[4] A reward they offered was rescinded in 2012 after the death of another diver who may have been trying to collect it, vindicating the criticism of the divers who had warned of that possibility and resented the McDaniels' insinuation that those who had searched for their son at great personal risk had not been "brave" enough.[5]

Although the McDaniels continue to believe Ben's body is in an area of the cave beyond the reach of current search capabilities, they have also entertained the possibility that his death was not an accident but the result of foul play. A private investigator they hired believes that his body may have been removed before any authorities were contacted, or that he may even have been murdered on land and the narrative of his disappearance fabricated as a cover story.

A segment of Investigation Discovery's Disappeared has been devoted to the case, as well as Ben's Vortex, a documentary co-directed by diver Jill Heinerth. In addition to the accident and murder theories, the documentary also considers the possibility that Ben staged the disappearance to escape a troubled recent past that included a divorce and financial setbacks. The McDaniels have vehemently rejected that theory, pointing to the dog and girlfriend he left behind as well as doubting that he would have knowingly subjected them to that level of grief after seeing how his brother's death had affected them.

  1. ^ Wolff, Cindy (February 19, 2012). "Theories about Collierville diver's disappearance swirl in vortex of unanswered questions". Memphis Commercial Appeal. Archived from the original on September 12, 2015. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  2. ^ Montgomery, Ben (April 15, 2011). "When a diver goes missing, a deep cave is scene of a deeper mystery". Tampa Bay Times. Archived from the original on 2015-07-20. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  3. ^ McDaniel, Shelby (June 20, 2013). "Ben McDaniel". scubaboard.com. Archived from the original on October 24, 2023. Retrieved July 26, 2015.
  4. ^ McDaniel, Shelby (August 21, 2013). "Comment#39523, LeisurePro story". Retrieved July 25, 2013.
  5. ^ Wolff, Cindy (April 14, 2012). "Collierville parents pull reward for missing diver". Memphis Commercial Appeal. Retrieved July 25, 2015.