So, after that was posted, the response from Michael Allweiss was:
Entire Response, (Too long to post the entire response in a single post):
International Hot Rod Association
speedonthewater.com
A Rebuttal to IHRA President Leah Martin’s Open Letter to Racers
By
Michael AllweissFebruary 10, 2026
As a former offshore racer, former Chairman of the APBA Offshore Racing Commission, and legal counsel for the families of racers who lost their lives—and competitors who were gravely injured—due to documented medical and safety failures at sanctioned events, I do not approach offshore safety as a talking point or branding exercise.
Michael Allweiss is the attorney for Shawn Steinert (far left), who leads the SSR Safety and Rescue Services crew.
I have seen what happens when command authority is unclear, when credentials are misunderstood or misused, and when responsibility is separated from control. I have read the transcripts. I have litigated the consequences. My involvement here is driven by those experiences—not by optics, politics or personal loyalty.
Those experiences, and my shared commitment for protecting racers, are precisely why Shawn Steinert and J.R. Anderson sought my assistance in addressing issues raised in discussions with IHRA leadership, including President Leah Martin, Director of Offshore Powerboating Tommy Thomassie and newly appointed Director of IHRA Safety, Justin Martin.
To be clear, my involvement here reflects professional judgment shaped by direct experience with offshore racing governance failures—not automated drafting tools, public relations strategies, or secondhand narratives.
I. Why This Response Exists
IHRA President Leah Martin’s recent “Open Letter” to race teams is not a clarification of safety policy. It is a public communication that targets Shawn Steinert, personally, and SSR Safety & Rescue while framing disputed governance issues as credential failures.
It contains:
• demonstrably false factual assertions,
• misleading legal conclusions,
• selective disclosure of information,
• and a clear effort to shift blame and justify a pre-determined outcome.
This response exists to set the record straight, identify material misrepresentations, and explain why SSR could not—and would not—participate in the structure IHRA attempted to impose.
II. The Public Criticism of Shawn Steinert Was Unwarranted and Unsupported.
Shawn Steinert did not refuse safety standards, insurance, training, or collaboration.
What he did do, consistently and professionally, was ask basic governance questions that any responsible rescue provider must ask:
• Who has authority during an on-water emergency?
• Who controls staffing and team composition?
• How is responsibility aligned with accountability if something goes wrong?
Instead of answering those questions, IHRA escalated to a public attack on Shawn’s professional credentials.
That choice raises an obvious question: Why was it necessary to attack Shawn personally at all? The answer appears self-evident: because Shawn would not endorse a structure that stripped SSR of authority while leaving it exposed to responsibility, and racers to the very real risk of injury and death
(Omissions were done here)
IV. The EMT Allegation is Factually Wrong and Professionally Damaging
IHRA’s letter asserts that the EMT certification of the individual serving as Safety Director at recent events “expired in 2022,” and implies this created an insurance and liability crisis.
This assertion is materially misleading.
Under the offshore rules framework governing SSR’s prior operations (APBA and WPRA), “EMT certification” refers to completion of EMT training, not active state medical licensure. EMT training certificates do not expire. State EMT licenses expire but are required only when an individual is practicing medicine under a medical director.
Shawn Steinert was not practicing medicine. He was performing rescue coordination, extraction, stabilization, and transfer to licensed medical professionals.
Conflating training certification with medical licensure and then invoking that conflation to suggest regulatory violations and insurance exposure, is not supported by the governing rules. It constitutes a material misrepresentation that directly harms professional reputation.
Moreover, by all objective accounts, Shawn and his 50-plus qualified and experienced SSR teammates have repeatedly performed effective, timely rescues that have saved lives. For more than a decade, SSR’s safety program has been widely regarded within offshore racing as reliable and effective.
Which raises an unavoidable question: why the abrupt shift from public praise to public disparagement?
V. IHRA’s Insurance Narrative is a Smokescreen
SSR never refused to carry insurance. SSR accurately explained that offshore racing has historically operated under promoter-held event policies covering racers, officials, and safety personnel—a structure well understood by experienced offshore promoters and sanctioning bodies, including individuals within IHRA leadership.
When IHRA asserted additional insurance requirements, SSR asked:
• who required them,
• under what policy,
• and whether SSR could speak with the insurer or broker. IHRA never provided that information.
Despite this, IHRA’s letter claims the sport “narrowly avoided a litigation and insurance time bomb.” No insurer, policy provision, underwriting letter, or coverage determination has ever been produced to support that claim. And again, it belies the truth.
Speculation is not evidence. When presented as fact in a public letter, it creates reputational harm without factual support.
(Omissions were done here)
VII. The SFI “Motorsports Rescue” Certification Does Not Resolve Offshore Safety Concerns
SSR does not dispute SFI’s credibility in equipment certification, particularly in automotive racing disciplines.
Shawn and J.R., along with leadership within APBA’s safety structure, have raised concerns not with SFI generally, but with the application of an SFI-administered Motorsports Rescue certification as a “minimum and controlling standard” for offshore powerboat rescue operations. In other words, SSR does dispute the legitimacy of an SFI-administered offshore rescue certification that lacks:
• The Motorsports Rescue curriculum or training standards.
• Information regarding who developed the program and their offshore racing or marine rescue experience.
• The offshore incidents, risk models, or operational protocols on which the program is based; or
• An explanation of how this certification meaningfully supplements or supersedes established offshore rescue training and experience.
As has been explained to IHRA on numerous occasions, absent that information, SSR cannot assess the program’s offshore applicability or responsibly treat it as a controlling qualification. To that end, safety experts have tried to secure this information directly from SFI, to no avail.
Simply put, offshore rescue is fundamentally different from equipment certification or land-based motorsports safety, and the basis for extending this program into that environment has not been articulated.
The involvement of individuals associated with prior offshore safety failures—documented in sworn testimony and litigation arising from the Joey Gratton tragedy—in the development or promotion of this program raises serious ethical and professional concerns. Elevating such a program while simultaneously attacking SSR’s proven track record defies logic and undermines trust.
VIII. Selective Transparency and Nepotism Concerns Should Matter.
IHRA publicly announced the hirings of:
• Gary Stray,
• Bob Teague,
• and Tommy Thomassie.
Yet IHRA did not disclose—until forced by public scrutiny—that Leah Martin’s husband, Justin, was privately installed as Safety Director.
That omission matters. Why? Because, the two sets of draft Safety Rules IHRA sent to Shawn reduced SSR from an integrated safety organization to a pool of individual hires under centralized control. And that control is vested exclusively in the Safety Director. In point of fact, under that model the IHRA Safety Director:
• selects the divers,
• controls staffing,
• defines roles,
• but the Lead Diver (the position IHRA invited Shawn and JR to apply for) bears operational risk.
The publicly available record raises serious questions about whether Mr. Martin possesses the offshore rescue experience typically required for such authority. IHRA has invited the public to assess that record for itself through recent interviews and statements.
(Omissions were done here)
XII. Conclusion
SSR Safety & Rescue has saved lives in offshore racing through:
• integrated teams,
• clear command structures,
• staffing control,
• and deep familiarity with boats, courses, and systems.
This did not need to become a public dispute. Shawn Steinert was criticized not because he was unsafe, but because he declined to legitimize a structure that compromised safety governance. Multiple respected rescue professionals reached the same conclusion. That avoidable and unnecessary outcome is the real tragedy here.
Editor’s note: A St. Petersburg, Fla.-based attorney representing Shawn Steinert, Michal Allweiss was the head of APBA Offshore LLC during the early 2000s. This rebuttal first appeared February 8 as a post. of Mr. Steinert’s Facebook page.
International Hot Rod Association
speedonthewater.com