Tourist loses both hands after provoking shark during beachside photo op: 'The shark didn't just see a human'
The 55-year-old tourist was visiting the island and snorkeling in shallow waters. According to the Department of Environment and Coastal Resources in Turks and Caicos, the tourist "attempted to engage with the animal from the shallows in an attempt to take photographs."
After being treated at a nearby hospital, the tourist, who has not been identified, was flown off the island to Canada for further medical care. As for the island, the beach was closed as a precaution. It was reopened on Feb. 9 "after it was determined that the shark had moved to deeper water."
The shark had not been identified, although it was estimated to be six feet long. According to Gavin Naylor, the director of the International Shark Attack File at the University of Florida, it was unconfirmed whether the shark bite was "provoked or unprovoked." The Royal Turks and Caicos Islands Police Force was investigating further.
In 2024, there were 88 confirmed shark bites across the world, according to the International Shark Files data. Of these 88 bites, 47 were listed as unprovoked bites. According to Chris Stefanou, a New York conservationist, photographing sharks carries a risk, as a phone or camera could be mistaken for a fish.
"Sharks, or any predatory animal in the ocean, can confuse that as like a bait fish," Chris Stefanou told the NYT. "The shark didn't just see a human: 'Ooh, I'm hungry, I want to go take a bite.' That did not happen."
There was also another reported shark encounter in the Caribbean the same day, with two Americans involved in the Bahamas, according to the Royal Bahamas Police Force. Gavin Naylor told the NYT this was unusual and made him "sit up a little."
Sharks don't carry the same threat that pop culture has made us think, with movies like Jaws and programs like Shark Week depicting them as ocean predators. According to the National Ocean Service, "Sharks have more to fear from humans than we do of them."
However, shark populations are threatened by habitat loss and overfishing of shark species. The Memorandum of Understanding on the Conservation of Migratory Sharks reports that up to 70 million sharks are killed by people every year. Shark Stewards reports a 71% decline in shark populations since 1970. Sharks are vital to the ocean ecosystem, so a change in their eating habits or location can affect other ocean populations.
Just like with animals on land, such as bears and elk, it's vital to respect sharks' habitat and their space. Keeping your distance from sharks is not only important for your safety but also for theirs. Especially with habitat loss leading to a change in the feeding habits of reef sharks, caution is important when swimming in water with sharks.
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"The DECR would like to urge the public to always be aware of your surroundings, follow local advisories, and respect marine life," the Turks and Caicos government wrote in a statement. "Swim in designated areas, avoid murky waters, never swim alone, and do not attempt to feed marine wildlife under any circumstances."
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Business Insider
2 hours ago
- Business Insider
A millennial made $300,000 secretly working multiple jobs — while tasked with catching others doing the same
A millennial's IT role involved catching people who were secretly working multiple jobs. He learned it was possible to go undetected, so he took a second job in secret, earning $300K annually. Job juggling helped him detect other overemployed workers, but nerves, tech, and ethics complicated it for him. Eric was paid to catch employees secretly working multiple jobs. Then he became one of them. A few years ago, Eric was working in an IT role at a large company. His job responsibilities included investigating three types of "illicit employment" within the organization: workers who outsourced their job responsibilities to overseas contractors, foreign actors who infiltrated companies by posing as legitimate hires, and employees secretly juggling multiple jobs without the company's approval. But Eric said there wasn't much suspicious activity to investigate, and that he was working as little as one hour each day. Then he had an idea: What if he took on a second job to boost his income? While Eric considered it, he initially held back because he was worried about getting caught. But that changed the following year, when his employer asked him to focus more on detecting job jugglers, and he realized just how difficult they were to identify. After weighing the risks, Eric applied for and landed a remote role, bringing his combined annual income to roughly $300,000. He said he only worked a couple of hours a day across the jobs. In addition to the financial benefits, Eric said he took the second job to gain an inside look at the " overemployed" world, one that might help him identify job jugglers. He said the firsthand experience helped him catch several employees who were ultimately fired. But this success came with a growing problem for Eric, one that ultimately cut his job-juggling journey short. He feared the very system he was building to catch others would end up catching him, and jeopardize his career. "It was like being the lead investigator on your own murder," said Eric, whose identity, employment, and income were verified by Business Insider, but who asked to use a pseudonym, citing fears of professional repercussions. "It was a wild time in my life." Eric, a millennial based in the US, is among the Americans who have secretly juggled multiple jobs to increase their incomes. Over the past three years, BI has interviewed more than two dozen "overemployed" workers who've used their extra cash to travel the world, buy expensive weight-loss drugs, and pay down student debt. To be sure, holding multiple jobs without employer approval could have professional repercussions and lead to burnout. Additionally, tech layoffs and return-to-office mandates have created obstacles for current and aspiring job jugglers. However, many overemployed workers have told BI that the financial benefits have generally outweighed the downsides and risks. Do you have a story to share about secretly working multiple jobs or discovering an employee is doing so? Contact this reporter via email at jzinkula@ or Signal at jzinkula.29. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely. A spending spree and improved detection methods Eric never planned for his job juggling to last forever. While his initial concerns about getting caught eased enough for him to accept the second role, he still worried that he'd eventually be exposed. "I thought I could make some money real quick and get out," he said. But if his savings started ballooning due to his two incomes, Eric feared he'd get "emotionally attached" to the extra earnings, making it harder to walk away. His solution was to spend freely on things he'd normally avoid. He said he viewed job juggling like renting a luxurious car: fun while it lasts, but not something you do forever. "I was ordering stuff off Amazon all the time," he said. "It was like expendable income." In addition to unlocking this spending spree, working multiple jobs gave Eric firsthand insight into how people with multiple roles operated — knowledge that helped him sharpen his detection skills and catch job jugglers. "It really wasn't until after I had my second job that I started getting actionable outcomes from my investigations because I just knew exactly what to look for," he said. Eric said he used internal company activity data to look for behavioral patterns that could suggest someone was juggling multiple jobs, such as sudden swings in productivity during specific parts of the day. Some workers were highly active in the morning and quiet all afternoon, or vice versa. His thinking, based partly on his personal experience, was that job jugglers would split time between their two roles. "I'd go back historically and see that at one point they were working all day and now they're not," he said. "So it just came down to behaviors." When an employee's activity seemed suspicious, Eric said he'd contact their manager and ask how often the worker appeared on camera during meetings, whether they'd missed any lately, and whether their work quality had declined over time. If concerns persisted, he'd suggest the manager schedule a one-on-one video call during the worker's usual inactive hours. If the employee repeatedly asked to delay or reschedule the call, that would raise red flags, and the case could eventually be handed off to HR. The risk became too big to stomach Even as Eric's detection capabilities improved, he said he wasn't too concerned about his own work behaviors being flagged. 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His detection work occasionally comes up during job interviews, and from what he's gathered, employers generally believe job jugglers will either drop a job after burning out or reaching a financial goal, or be let go for underperformance. If catching overemployed workers isn't a big priority for most companies, many job jugglers might be able to avoid detection, at least in the short term. Looking back, Eric said he sometimes wonders whether he could have kept going a little longer. "I just felt like I was going to get caught, and I didn't want to lose my entire career, so I had to stop," he said. "But man, I kind of regret it sometimes. It was really good money."


Boston Globe
8 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Martin Cruz Smith, best-selling author of ‘Gorky Park,' dies at 82
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up By the time he wrote 'Gorky Park' (1981), Mr. Smith had spent years toiling in obscurity, churning out paperback westerns, thrillers, and suspense novels, most of them written under pseudonyms like Jake Logan and Simon Quinn. There were times, he said, when he could 'only be accurately described as a schlockmeister.' How else to account for novels like 'North to Dakota,' which 'started off,' he remembered, 'with the hero strangling a chimpanzee'? Advertisement In those days, Mr. Smith usually took six to eight weeks to finish a novel. But when he slowed down, as he did with 'Gorky Park,' he wrote with a far more elegant and refined voice, crafting books that were admired for their psychological acuity, literary sophistication, and rich depiction of faraway cultures (Russia's, in particular) that few Americans knew firsthand. Advertisement The culmination of about eight years of work, 'Gorky Park' was acclaimed as a masterpiece of the crime genre, impressing critics with its shrewd and incorruptible protagonist - a Russian Sam Spade - and its carefully drawn portrait of Soviet-era Moscow. The book 'reminds you just how satisfying a smoothly turned thriller can be,' wrote New York Times reviewer Peter Andrews. In The Washington Post, former Moscow correspondent Peter Osnos declared that 'Gorky Park' 'is to ordinary suspense stories what John le Carré is to spy novels. The action is gritty, the plot complicated, the overriding quality is intelligence.' In broad strokes, the novel followed the contours of a classic work of crime fiction. A hard-bitten police investigator, Renko, is enlisted to solve a triple murder, with three mutilated bodies found in Moscow's Gorky Park. The victims were shot at close range and had their finger tips and faces sliced off, concealing their identities. The case took Renko around the world (including to Staten Island), even as Moscow remained the book's gravitational center. For many critics, Mr. Smith's signature achievement was the way he conjured Russian society on the page, writing about apparatchiks and propagandists, the merits of vodka (there are two kinds, 'good and very good'), and the relationship between ordinary street detectives and their counterparts in the KGB. Improbably, Mr. Smith spent no more than two weeks in the country in 1973. (Mr. Smith was denied a visa when he attempted to return.) He spoke no Russian and had no interpreter, although he took voluminous notes and made sketches of the sort of people and places he planned to write about. Advertisement 'More perhaps than any other recent work of American fiction,' Osnos wrote, 'this one conveys a feeling for the Soviet Union, its capital, its moods and its people. … I spent weeks hanging around Soviet courtrooms and in Smith's portrayals, I smell the musty aroma; I can see the faces; I can hear the voices.' The novel won the Gold Dagger, a top honor from the Crime Writers' Association of Britain, and was adapted into a 1983 Hollywood movie starring William Hurt as Renko. 'I thought it was dreadful,' Mr. Smith said of the film. In the Soviet Union, authorities condemned the novel in spite of its heroic Russian protagonist. The book was banned, although it found an audience thanks to dissidents and intellectuals who managed to distribute copies underground. 'Even scientist and academician Andrei Sakharov was a big fan,' said Alex Levin, a Russian émigré who helped Mr. Smith with his research, in a 2005 interview with the Guardian. Mr. Smith, a former journalist, said that he was driven by a desire to find out 'what is happening in the Soviet Union.' His subsequent Renko novels used history as a backdrop, following the detective through the Soviet Union's collapse (in 'Red Square'), the Chechen War ('Stalin's Ghost'), and Russia's invasion of Ukraine ('Hotel Ukraine'). Other installments invoked the Chernobyl nuclear disaster ('Wolves Eat Dogs') and took inspiration from the 2006 assassination of Anna Politkovskaya, a Russian investigative journalist ('Tatiana'). To research the books, Mr. Smith made return trips to Russia, traveled to Ukraine and Cuba, and spent three weeks aboard a Soviet factory ship in the Bering Sea. He was kicked off, he said, after the ship's political officer located his name in a Soviet list of 'foreign agents provocateurs to avoid.' Advertisement Mr. Smith went on to spend what he described as an 'endless' week on an American trawler, 'looking at the fog.' Still, he was happy to be conducting research in-person, later saying: 'There are things you experience that are so basic that people just don't tell you. It's a little bit like people telling you about going to sea - nobody bothers to tell you that it is salty. They always overlook the details.' The second of three children, Martin William Smith was born in Reading, Pa., on Nov. 3, 1942. He adopted his pseudonym, incorporating his maternal grandmother's name, Cruz, after realizing there were a half-dozen other 'Martin Smiths' trying to get published. His father, who came from a Scottish Episcopal family, was a jazz saxophonist and photographer. His mother, a descendant of Pueblo and Yaqui Indians, was a former beauty queen and a nightclub singer, once billed as 'Princess Louisa, the All-American Songbird.' The family moved frequently before settling outside Philadelphia, where his father found a job at the Budd Co., a metal fabricator. Mr. Smith, who was known as Bill, was educated at the nearby Germantown Academy. He was a poor student, in his telling, barely making it in to the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied sociology before failing a statistics paper and switching to creative writing. After graduating in 1964, he spent a few years in journalism, with jobs at the Associated Press, a local television station, and the Philadelphia Daily News. He also had a brief stint editing For Men Only, a New York-based magazine that taught him the importance of brevity. Advertisement 'We wasted no words getting someone through a door; we couldn't fool around with Henry Jamesian language,' he told the Guardian. By 1970, Mr. Smith had started writing novels, including a work of speculative fiction, 'The Indians Won,' that imagined the existence of a Native American state in the center of America. His other books included a series of thrillers about a Vatican hit man who, after dispatching his victims, dutifully goes to confession. After reading a Newsweek article about Soviet forensic scientists working to re-create the faces of murder victims, Mr. Smith began work on 'Gorky Park.' The book was pitched to his publisher as a team-up story, featuring mismatched Soviet and American detectives who work together on a case. But after his trip to Moscow, Mr. Smith decided to focus on the Russian and effectively dropped the American, to his publisher's dismay. He spent years working to buy back the rights to the book, which he later resold to Random House in a reported $1 million deal. In the interim, he was supported by the proceeds from his 1977 novel 'Nightwing,' a supernatural thriller involving vampire bats and Hopi Native American lore. Mr. Smith married one of his college classmates, Emily Arnold, in 1968. 'She was his first reader,' his children said in a statement, 'and his moral touchstone.' In addition to his wife, he leaves three children, Nell Branco, Luisa Smith, and Sam Smith; a brother; and five grandchildren. Mr. Smith was a two-time winner of the Hammett Prize for crime fiction, awarded for his Victorian-era thriller 'Rose' (1996), which he set in the mining country around Wigan, England, and 'Havana Bay' (1999), in which Renko tracks a killer in Cuba. In 2019, he received the Grand Master Award from the Mystery Writers of America. Advertisement 'By looking at the underworld you see how mainstream society works,' he told the Guardian, discussing his love of crime fiction. 'You can travel through a social fracture and, for a limited amount of time, you can behave differently and ask whatever embarrassing questions you like.'
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
U.S. Issues 'Do Not Travel' Warning For Caribbean Country
It's vacation season throughout the United States, as many Americans are taking advantage of the warm weather by traveling out of the country for overseas vacations. But the United States has warned that there is one Caribbean country that you should avoid this summer. On July 15, the United States Department of State issued its most severe travel advisory for the nation of Haiti, warning all Americans not to travel to the country for any reason due to kidnapping, crime, terrorist activity, civil unrest, and limited health care. The latest advisory was issued on Tuesday morning with the addition of a terror indicator. However, the country has been seen as a high-risk travel destination for quite some time. "In July 2023, the Department of State ordered nonemergency U.S. government employees and their family members to leave the country due to security risks," the latest travel advisory reads. "Haiti has been under a State of Emergency since March 2024. Crimes involving firearms are common in Haiti. They include robbery, carjackings, sexual assault, and kidnappings for ransom. Do not travel to Haiti for any reason." The advisory warns that kidnapping in the country is widespread and that "U.S. citizens have been victims and have been hurt or killed." Additionally, U.S. victims' families have paid tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars to rescue family members who have been kidnapped. In addition to the threat of kidnapping and robbery, Haiti is at an increased risk of violent crime and terrorism, putting travelers at risk even if they are not involved in the violence. "There is widespread violent crime and organized crime in the country, and local law enforcement has limited ability to respond to serious crimes. Violent crime is rampant in Haiti, especially in Port-au-Prince, where the expansion of gang, organized crime, and terrorist activity has led to widespread violence, kidnappings, and sexual assault. The escalation of clashes between armed groups has led to a rise in sporadic gunfire incidents. There is a substantial risk of being struck by stray bullets, even for individuals not directly involved in the violence," the travel advisory warns. "There is risk of terrorist violence, including attacks and other violent gang activity in Haiti. There are gangs that are designated as terrorist organizations present in Haiti." Additionally, the United States warns that it is limited in its ability to offer assistance to anyone who chooses to travel to Haiti. "The U.S. government is very limited in its ability to help U.S. citizens in Haiti. Local police and first responders often do not have enough resources. This limits their ability to respond to emergencies or serious crimes. Shortages of gasoline, electricity, medicine, and medical supplies are common throughout the country. Public and private clinics, as well as hospitals, have untrained staff and lack basic resources. Medical providers almost always require upfront payment in cash," the advisory warns. There are four levels of travel advisories from the State Department, with the Level 4 advisory given to Haiti ranking as the most severe. U.S. Issues 'Do Not Travel' Warning For Caribbean Country first appeared on Men's Journal on Jul 15, 2025