Coast Guard looks into ’spout chasers’The Coast Guard is investigating two Florida Keys divers who made a 
splash on the Internet and TV news stations last week after they 
posted a video of themselves entering a waterspout.
Investigative service agents are looking into whether Aaron Osters 
and Kevin Johnson are licensed Coast Guard boat captains, and if 
they are, whether they should be civilly reprimanded, said Coast 
Guard Sector Key West Deputy Cmdr. John Reed.
Osters is the owner of Bandito Spearguns and Florida Keys 
Kiteboarding.
There were no other people on the boat.
The men were snorkeling for lobster in the Gulf of Mexico offshore 
of the Seven Mile Bridge when they steered their small 17-foot skiff 
directly into one of seven waterspouts. The waterspout was 30 feet 
wide and had a vortex that was 15 feet wide. They captured the event 
with both photos and a video.
If either man is a licensed captain, such behavior may warrant sanctions, 
but the Coast Guard probably would not attempt to strip either man of a 
captain’s license. Instead, the license holder would probably receive a 
warning in the form of a letter, Reed said.
Reed said attempts to reach Osters and Johnson by phone Wednesday were 
not successful.
"It’s not a criminal offense, but there are a list of things you have to 
follow if you have a mariner’s license, regardless of whether you have 
paying customers on board," he said.
The Coast Guard used the incident to remind mariners of the dangers 
waterspouts can pose.
"Waterspouts should be avoided by both professional and recreational 
boaters," said Lt. Cmdr. Michael Capelli. "A waterspout is a small 
tornado and poses the same dangers as a tornado on land. It can toss 
people overboard. It can lift debris off the deck and potentially hit 
you and knock you out. And, God forbid, you get thrown overboard, the 
boat overturns and you lose your radio. Then no one knows you were even 
there, and that could delay a Coast Guard response."
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