WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Two Florida divers who cut 19 sharks loose from a fisherman’s line and destroyed his gear won’t spend a day in prison.

John Moore Jr. and Tanner Mansell faced up to five years in federal prison and as much as $250,000 in fines after jurors convicted them of theft in December. U.S. Judge Donald Middlebrooks spared them from both this month, sentencing the men to one year of probation and about $3,345 in repayment to the fisherman whose sharks they freed.

Moore, 56, and Mansell, 29, had taken six tourists to swim with sharks when they came across the animals ensnared in Richard Thomas Osburn’s bottom longline fishery set on Aug. 10, 2020. Prosecutors said they cut the sharks from the line, scavenged it for hooks and weights and left the rest on the dock. Passersby picked it clean, then loaded it into a cart and placed it in a dumpster.

The gear alone cost the vessel owner about $1,300, said prosecutor Thomas Austin Watts-Fitzgerald. The value of the freed sharks amounted to several thousand more.

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Shark rescue or theft?

Moore and Mansell’s indictment for theft in October ignited fierce debate over whether they deserved to be prosecuted. The men insisted they believed the 6-mile-long fishing line was illegal and abandoned, characterizing the ordeal as a shark rescue – not a theft.

It’s why Moore said he paused halfway through pulling the line aboard to call state law-enforcement officers and report what he said he believed was an illegal shark fishing operation. It’s why he shared photos of the confiscated gear to Instagram and Facebook, decrying the person who left it in the water.