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Bobcat

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Florida fisherman hooks live missile in Gulf

MADEIRA BEACH, Fla. -- (AP) -- Florida authorities say a commercial fisherman reeled in a live missile in the Gulf of Mexico and kept it on his boat for 10 days.

The sheriff's office in Pinellas County said the boat's captain, Rodney Salomon, hooked the air-to-air guided missile 50 miles off the Panhandle town of Panama City. The Air Force and Navy use Gulf waters off the Panhandle for weapons training.

Salomon had the missile aboard his boat for 10 days before returning Monday to port in Madeira Beach, near St. Petersburg.

A bomb squad was called in from MacDill Air Force Base and dismantled the missile in an empty parking lot.

The bomb squad said the missile was very corroded from floating in saltwater for a long time. They said it was live and in a very unstable state.
 
This guy's a rocket surgeon, for sure. :rolleyes:

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MADEIRA BEACH — Commercial fisherman Solomon Rodney ensnared an 8-foot-long missile in his longline while out in the Gulf of Mexico near Panama City late last month.

Rodney tied the missile to the top of his boat, the Bold Venture, and kept it there for the rest of the 14-day fishing trip. He brought the missile ashore Monday evening along with his 5,000 pounds of grouper.

Rodney figured he'd keep the inert missile as a souvenir.

Only one problem: It was live.

After Rodney came ashore, emergency officials summoned a bomb squad from MacDill Air Force Base to a marina off the Tom Stuart Causeway where Rodney had docked.

"This is a live air-to-air missile," Pinellas sheriff's spokeswoman Marianne Pasha said Monday evening. "It is 8 feet long, and the MacDill team is dismantling it."

Officials cleared everyone out from 500 feet around the missile and asked a few people in nearby houseboats to move away.

The bomb squad dismantled the missile and left the scene just before 11 p.m.

Rodney, 37, said the missile had a hole in the back, making it look like it had already exploded, so he thought it was safe. He didn't think there was any danger of it exploding on land after it had bounced around on the roof of his 41-foot vessel for 10 days.

"If it was going to explode, it was going to explode a long time ago," he said.


Rodney, who was captain of the boat with three other fishermen, said he found the missile about 50 miles south of Panama City. That part of the gulf is used by the U.S. Air Force and Navy for weapons testing and training.

The Navy's Gulf of Mexico Range Complex, or GOMEX, extends south into the gulf between Panama City and Pensacola. To the east, Eglin Air Force Base uses 86,500 square miles of water and air space.

The Air Force has been testing missiles at Eglin since the 1940s, according to GlobalSecurity.org.

Rodney said he often sees missiles while fishing in that area. "I hear them exploding over my head all the time," he said.

The St. Petersburg captain said in February 2008 one landed 10 yards from his boat and exploded. He recorded the incident in his logbook, including his position, the time of day and this exclamation: "Thank God."

"It was a big explosion," he said. "It's ridiculous."


In fact, Rodney said the missile he carried to shore Monday was actually one of two he found on this trip. He said the other one appeared live to him — it had lights, a gauge and a camera that appeared active.

Rodney said he was fishing at a depth of 785 feet when he pulled up the missile. Pasha said the missile was corroded from saltwater, making it very unstable. Rodney reported his find to the Madeira Beach Fire Department when he got to shore.

In 2004, authorities investigated how a missile ended up in a Fort Myers scrap yard. It is believed it got caught in a shrimp boat's nets. It wasn't discovered until a welder set off the motor.

In 2008, a fisherman in India died in an explosion while trying to remove metal from missile remnants he found at sea, according to news accounts.

Rodney said the MacDill people told him not to pick up any more missiles. "They told me if you find another one, just let it go," he said.
 
Rocket surgeon! Oh mama! :D

This must have been an interesting afternoon at the scrapyard...

"In 2004, authorities investigated how a missile ended up in a Fort Myers scrap yard. It is believed it got caught in a shrimp boat's nets. It wasn't discovered until a welder set off the motor."
 
the 4th of july will be here before you know it.... Honey, *cough* have you seen my fingers???
 
A guy I went to high school with, owns a company on Mad Beach where the commercial fisherman sell thier catch. I'll have to get in touch with him to find out if that's where it was. I think there are only two on Mad Beach. :)
 
I lived in Panama City twice, once in grade school, and once in jr high. We used to camp on the beach there, and I had quite the collection of 50 mm tracers I found on the beach. That area was used for target practice for Tyndal AFB, Eglin AFB, Pensacola Naval Air Base, and even as far away as Jax Naval Air Station. I read somewhere it's the busiest airspace in the country, or it used to be.
 
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