The department has provided the Harbor Patrol Unit with a variety of specialized vessels, including the 86-foot "St. Michael," a retired Navy minesweeper; the 41-foot "Due Process," a former Coast Guard utility boat; and two 27-foot, high-speed intercept boats named "Protector" and "Persuader." The pride of the fleet is the "Guardian," a 57-foot Sea Ark used for command-and-control rescue and recovery operations. It is also equipped with state-of-the art navigation, communications and video equipment, and a four-bed medical triage unit.
The Boston Police Dive Team is comprised of 22 officers who work various assignments throughout the department, and are called out for diving or water-rescue operations as needed. Some officers specialize in ice diving and rescues of people or animals that have fallen through the ice. Others specialize in obstructive-area diving, similar to cave diving. Still others specialize in Nitrox scuba diving, which enables officers to extend dive times by using specialized oxygen rebreathing apparatus.
Dive officers have participated in search-and-rescue missions, evidence recovery operations, and underwater searches for drugs or explosives attached to ship hulls, including those of immense cruise liners, cargo ships, and U.S. Navy warships.
"We had done an operation a few years back with the FBI...that ended up being a six-week dive operation, searching for weapons and evidence," says Terenzi, who declined to detail the nature of the investigation. In addition to conducting underwater searches in Worcester, Mass., and East Boston, officers involved in that case also undertook an exhaustive, four-week search beneath a 900-foot pier in Charlestown, Mass.
Working conditions for Dive Team officers are neither pleasant nor safe. In the winter, there is ice to contend with, and even in summer, water temperatures and thick harbor bottom muck can be bitingly cold. For safety reasons, dives must be carefully timed and coordinated to minimize dangers posed by shipping traffic and tides. And the harbor itself is littered with dangerous debris, including broken bottles and cans, sunken boats and automobile parts, and discarded monofilament fishing line that can trap unwary divers in a hazardous, invisible embrace.