
A would-be drugs bust turned into a rescue operation off the coast of
Central America last month.
Coast Guardsmen aboard the Cutter Stratton from Alameda, California, who
were investigating a suspicious item floating in a known drug transit
zone instead made a unique rescue.
Instead of drugs, the crew found two large sea turtles entangled in
fishing line and makeshift buoys.
"There was no question what we had to do," said Petty Officer 2nd Class
Hylan Rousseau, the coxswain of Stratton's interceptor boat. "And no one spoke a word. We immediately moved in to rescue mode."
An officer-mounted camera captured the rescue operation. One of the
turtles had line wrapped around its neck, which restricted its airway
and caused apparent respiratory distress.
"We cut the first turtle free without much incident," said Chief Petty Officer Brian Milcetich, a member of the law enforcement team. "While we were freeing him, we could see the second, and much larger turtle, was quite literally choking to death. He had been trying so hard to free himself from the fishing line that he had cinched the line around his own neck."
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