RELATED: White shark washed up on Santa Cruz Co. beach had multiple injuries
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Seeing great white sharks swim along the Monterey Bay is fairly common -- just ask fisherman Dan Phillips. He spotted one Wednesday in the water. "I saw the fin of a great white. It was probably about 16 to 18 inches tall," said Phillips.
Seeing a great white washed ashore is very rare.
That's what happened Sunday morning as people captured disturbing images of a 9-foot-long great white on Beer Can Beach in Aptos.
The shark was covered with gashes and cuts, but there weren't any serious external signs of trauma, according to witnesses.
A necropsy was performed on the carcass Tuesday. The Department of Fish and Wildlife is not releasing those results but has opened up a criminal investigation into the shark's death.
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PHOTOS: Dead great white shark washes ashore in Santa Cruz County
"That leaves me to think they found something in the necropsy that suggests more criminal intent than an accidental catch," said David Ebert, director of the Pacific Shark Research Center at Moss Landing Marine Lab.
Ebert has written extensively on sharks and says this type of criminal investigation is unique in California, given that great white sharks are a protected species.
"By protected species, you're not able to go out there and catch them, whether it's recreational or commercially. People can't go out and target them," Ebert said.
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The question of who would kill a great white and how remains a mystery.
Fish and Wildlife officials would not comment further on the incident because it's an open investigation.
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