Diver pinned by an alligator figured he had choice: Lose his arm or lose his life

Out of air and pinned by an alligator to the bottom of the Cooper River in South Carolina, a diver decided his only chance to survive might be to lose his arm.

Out of air and pinned by an alligator to the bottom of the Cooper River in South Carolina, a diver decided his only chance to survive might be to lose his arm. (Stuart Forster, Alamy)


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GOOSE CREEK, S.C. — Out of air and pinned by an alligator to the bottom of the Cooper River in South Carolina, Will Georgitis decided his only chance to survive might be to lose his arm.

The alligator had fixed his jaws around Georgitis' arm and after he tried to escape by stabbing it with the screwdriver he uses to pry fossilized shark teeth off the riverbed, the gator shook the diver and dragged him 50 feet down, Georgitis told The Post and Courier.

"I knew I was going to die right then and there," he told the Charleston newspaper.

The alligator attacked Georgitis on April 15 as he surfaced from his dive, nearly out of air. His tank emptied with the gator's jaws crushing the arm he put up in defense. Georgitis figured he had one last chance.

"I put my feet up against him, just launched back as hard as I possibly could, and somehow ripped my arm out and not off," Georgitis told ABC's Good Morning America.

Georgitis frantically swam to a friend's waiting boat and was taken to shore and the hospital. His arm was broken and he needed "a ton" of staples to close up the wounds from the alligator's teeth, he said.

There are probably several surgeries and six months of recovery.

"Every moment from here on out is a blessing to me," Georgitis told Good Morning America.

Georgitis frequently dives looking for shark teeth and other fossils in the waters around Charleston. He has been to the spot where he was attacked at least 30 times and while he has seen alligators before, they usually are sunning on the back or stay far away.

He was stunned this one made a beeline for him as soon as he surfaced.

The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources is aware of the attack and is investigating.

South Carolina has about 100,000 alligators, which are federally protected species. The state has strict rules about when the alligators can be removed or killed, wildlife officials said.

Attacks are rare and usually take place on land when alligators attack pets or someone falls into a pond. South Carolina has had at least six fatal alligator attacks since 2016.

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