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A 3,500 Pound Beast Has Long Island Swimmers Worried

Sunday, May 17, 2015 9:52
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(Before It's News)

 Great white sharks are no stranger to Long Island waters. Right now there is a 3,500 hundred pound beast they call Mary Lee, lurking just offshore of Fire Island.  This has some locals terrified to go swimming. 

Authorities have no plan in place to protect swimmers from lurking shark
Mary Lee the great white shark is 16 feet long and weighs around 3,500 pounds.Photo: Twitter via @MaryLeeShark

According to The New York Post - This is Jaws-dropping!

The great white shark Mary Lee spent Tuesday prowling the ­waters off Long Island — yet authorities have no plan in place to quickly alert swimmers if she gets too close to the beach, The Post has learned.

The 3,500-pound beast is equipped with an electronic tracking device that is monitored by the non-profit OCEARCH, which had her a mere 10 miles from the shores of Robert Moses State Park as swimmers flocked there on an ­89-degree day.

But there is no system for relaying the tracking information to area parks departments, sources said. Instead, the only line of defense keeping swimmers out of the maneater’s mouth are the lifeguards — who aren’t even on duty until Memorial Day.

“A shark would have to be seen by lifeguards or park personnel before swimmers would be alerted of it,” a state parks- ­department source said.

Long Island beaches would likely close if a shark was spotted less than a quarter-mile away, the source said.

A city Parks Department spokeswoman said the same goes for the five boroughs.

“If a lifeguard coordinator thinks there is a public-safety risk present, like a shark, he or she can close the beach until the area is cleared,” she said.

Modal Trigger

OCEARCH global shark tracker has spotted Mary Lee.Photo: OCEARCH

On Tuesday — the hottest day of the year — swimmers braving the chilly waters at Robert Moses were worried they would end up being Mary Lee’s next meal.

“I don’t want to be part of Jaws 3,” said beachgoer Katie Houghes, 18.

Others said they thought about going for a dip until they heard about Mary Lee’s Long Island ­excursion.

“It’s a little scary knowing there’s a shark in the water,” said Kyle Russo, 19, who hit the sand with a few friends. “You couldn’t pay me to go into the water.”

Shark experts and local fishermen warned that Mary Lee likely isn’t the only fish in the sea.

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