By Mike Readling

When Palm Beach County installed 62, 1- to 2-ton pods just offshore from Ocean Ridge last year, the idea was to provide a breakwater for the beach renourishment project it had in the works.
One of the byproducts of that venture was the variety of sea life the artificial reef was going to attract in an area that was swimmable from shore. What wasn’t planned was the daily group of spearfishermen who use the public beach for access to fill their stringers with fish of every kind, leaving the discard on the sea floor, according to some beachside residents.
These spearfishermen – there are three or four distinct groups, said local resident Kim Jones – bully the swimmers, shoot with disregard for anyone around them and seem to do so without any ramifications.

Eric Espanet, 43, a county pocket resident and local spear fisherman for fifteen years, is familiar with the area and amateurs armed with spear guns. He recounts a time last year when he was diving south of the inlet and a teenage girl had a spear gun pointed within three feet of his face. As soon as he surfaced, her boyfriend grabbed it away from her. “Any real spear fishermen would go beyond the swimming area anyway,“ Espanet said, “where the fish are better, especially now with the new rock.”

Jones, however, said the spearfishers she’s talking about are not your run-of-the-mill weekend amateurs. “These are not your normal every day snorkler with a spear gun,” said Jones, who lives in a condo that overlooks the reef and regularly exercises by swimming the reef line. “These guys are extremely sophisticated. They’ve got these camouflaged blue wet suits. They’ve got lag lines. They shoot everything and anything and what they decide they don’t want, they leave in the sea floor, which attracts sharks. They are so aggressive with their guns in and around swimmers.”

Jones said she has called the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission at least 17 times and the nearby Ocean Club has called at least 12 times to report the activity. She said police showed up one time and made an arrest, but only because they were already in the area.

A spokesman for the Ocean Ridge Police Department said his department has not received any calls about the spearfishermen. If they did, he said Ocean Ridge PD would call the FWC or the Marine Patrol. Numerous messages left at the Palm Beach Sheriff Marine Patrol unit located less than 100 yards from the beach where the spearfishing is taking place were unreturned.

Al MacQueen, who has been with Ocean Rescue for 20 years, works as a lifeguard on the beach the spearfishers use to access the reef pods. He has seen spearfishers taking illegal fish like snook, sharks and mangrove snapper but said Ocean Rescue enforces the fishing statutes and he wasn’t aware of any complaints.
State law requires spearfishers to fish no closer than 100 yards from a public bathing beach, said FWC spokesman Lee Schlesinger. As long as the spear fishers are not within that 100 yards, they can use the shore for access and are allowed to take as many fish as the regulations allow, assuming they have the proper fishing license.

Paul Davis works for Palm Beach County Environmental Resource Management, the department responsible for placing the pods which comprise the reef. He said he didn’t have exact numbers on the distance of the pods from shore, but used a scale model aerial picture and estimated the range is 300 feet from shore at the south end, up to 600 feet at the north end.

“I can tell you the pods on the south end are definitely closer than 100 yards,” Jones said. “I swim them every week from the beach and they are within 100 yards. We just need some enforcement. They know what they’re doing is wrong, there’s just nobody there to do anything about it.”


Erika Kraft contributed to this report.

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