The only crash that has had a GIA-trained pilot at the controls was 3407. In the CMR crash, the non-fly was the GIA-trained pilot, and he hadn't worked at GIA in years (where he had been an instructor, BTW). The 3701 crash involved a pilot who had worked at GIA, but he was hired at GIA as a street captain and had thousands of hours flying turbine equipment prior to ever getting hired at GIA.
Sorry guys, but you can't blame GIA. The fact remains that GIA has a spotless record with not a single fatality in twenty years of business, flying some of the oldest, least-automated equipment into some of the busiest airspace and some of the smallest strips in the islands. The best training I've ever received was at GIA, and I've got to say, some of the most professional pilots also. I can't remember flying with a single non-standard captain out of the dozens I flew with while I was there. Lack of professionalism simply wasn't tolerated.
Now, understand, that's not an endorsement of the PFT program by any stretch, which I still think is a horrible thing, and I tell everyone not to make the same mistake I did. However, setting the PFT issue aside, GIA is a well-run operation with a spotless record. Trying to pin safety issues on them is just disingenuous.