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Meat hook dangling craze mystifies police
MIAMI, Florida (Reuters)
-- Law enforcement officials in the Florida Keys are mystified by a bizarre new
pastime -- young people dangling themselves from meat hooks on a popular sandbar.
A U.S. Coast Guard spokeswoman said on Sunday that the Monroe County sheriff's
office and Coast Guard were called on July 12 to the sandbar off Whale Harbor
in Islamorada where locals say wild behavior is becoming a tradition.
They found that five young people had erected a bamboo
tripod and hung meat hooks from it. A young woman, her feet
brushing the surface of the shallow water, dangled from the
frame, hooks embedded firmly in her shoulders.
According to a Coast Guard video, she did not seem to mind
the hooks.
Lt. Tom Brazil of the Coast Guard told the Key West Citizen
newspaper that a young man, who also had hooks embedded in
his heavily pierced and tattooed skin, assured him the group
was "just enjoying the afternoon."
A Coast Guard spokeswoman in Miami said the group had
clearly done this before and intended to post photos of
themselves on a Web site dedicated to "body modification" --
the ritualistic piercing of the body.
"It looked like a daily routine for them," she said, adding
that the hooks had been inserted in the skin in a
professional manner and had drawn very little blood."
"As long as they weren't creating any kind of ruckus or riot
within a crowd they really weren't breaking any laws."
The Coast Guard passed the video on to federal justice
authorities but no further action will be taken.
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