Massachusetts

1 Year After Fatal Shark Attack, Cape Cod Officials Reflect

Local beach officials say they've had few water rescues this year, a sign that swimmers are heeding their warnings about staying in waist deep water only

Officials on Cape Cod are reflecting on the one-year anniversary of Massachusetts' first fatal shark attack in more than 80 years.

Cape Cod National Seashore Superintendent Brian Carlstrom tells The Cape Cod Times that the famous tourist region has improved its emergency response following the death of 26-year-old Revere resident Arthur Medici last Sept. 15 while bodyboarding off Newcomb Hollow Beach in Wellfleet.

A shark was detected at the same beach Sunday, closing the beach to swimmers for about an hour. The technology that detected the shark is a buoy that senses tagged sharks and alerts beach managers.

Local beach officials say they've had few water rescues this year, a sign that swimmers are heeding their warnings about staying in waist deep water only.

And William Lytton, the New York man who survived a shark attack off Truro last August, says he returned to Cape Cod this summer and swam. Lytton says he just avoided swimming off the Atlantic Ocean beaches where great whites are frequently spotted.

Want to learn more about sharks? Subscribe to NBC10 Boston's Shark Tales podcast, a partnership with the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy that takes a deep dive into sharks on Cape Cod.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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