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VIDEO: Man Jumps in Water Filled with Crocodiles and Does Shocking Gesture

Most people get terrified just by talking about crocodiles, not to mention how they feel when they are actually quite near a real one.

So, of course, everyone was shocked and scared when they saw a man leap into the water all of a sudden so that he could feed the crocodiles without being afraid for their life.

While most people would think that the man should be afraid of the alligators attacking him it seems that he actually had another reason for which he should have been afraid.

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According to abc13.com, authorities have ordered swamp boat tour operators in the South Louisiana community of Jefferson Parish to stop feeding alligators after video of a tour guide doing so went viral, the sheriff’s office said Thursday.

There is no Louisiana law prohibiting luring and feeding of alligators, but it’s against local law in Jefferson Parish, where a tourist captured video of an Airboat Adventures tour guide swimming with and feeding two alligators.

At one point the video captures the guide putting a marshmallow in his mouth and letting an alligator snatch it away.

“We have now initiated our own investigation into the incident,” said Col. John Fortunato, a spokesman for the parish sheriff’s office.

He said officers have met with representatives of the swamp tour boat companies in Jefferson Parish and have instructed them to cease any feeding of alligators.

Each business was provided a copy of the Jefferson Parish ordinance on this subject, he said.

No charges had been filed as of Thursday.

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“Just recently, this information was brought to our attention. Prior to that, we had no formal complaint, nor, were we ever notified of any illegal activity involving the swamp tour boat companies,” Fortunato said.

He said his office is working closely with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries in investigating this entire incident.

The video was shot by Stacy Hicks, a tourist from St. Helens, Oregon, who was visiting south Louisiana last month.

In it, gasps can be heard by tourists on the boat as the guide, Lance LaCrosse, jumps in the water to feed chicken and marshmallows to two scary-looking alligators.

“When he jumped in I was a little scared, more for him than us though,” Hicks said. “I am surprised at the attention this video has gotten. I just thought that this was a thing that happens all the time on the tours.”

An Airboat Adventures spokesman declined to comment. Calls and Facebook requests for comment from LaCrosse have not immediately been returned.

Bo Boehringer, a wildlife and fisheries spokesman, said that wildlife agents and parish officials are reviewing the video to determine if there was any wrongdoing at that moment.

Louisiana’s wild alligator population is estimated to be approaching 2 million. There are also more than 300,000 alligators on alligator farms in Louisiana.

Indiscriminate hunting once left American alligators nearly extinct, but they were removed from the endangered species list in 1987.

Alligators are still listed as threatened on the U.S. endangered species list.

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