Ocean claims fourth victim
Jenny Marder
The fourth drowning this summer was reported last week at Sunset
Beach when a Lakewood resident was discovered floating face down in
the water.
Richard Brown, 25, was unconscious by the time two beachgoers
found him at 3:45 p.m. and pulled him from the water. Several
lifeguard units began CPR and continued until the paramedics arrived
and rushed him to Los Alamitos Medical Center. He was pronounced dead
at 4:30 p.m.
The drowning occurred near 24th Street, between lifeguard towers
21 and 26, a notoriously busy stretch, said Patti Schooley, a parks
district supervisor in charge of coastal facilities for county
operated beaches.
The waves were about three feet and surf conditions were fairly
calm at the time of the incident, Schooley said. Nobody in the water
or at the beach saw Brown struggling.
“He was found approximately 20 feet from the shoreline,” Schooley
said. “That’s really not very far. It’s a shallow water incident.”
But Brown could still have been caught in underwater currents,
difficult to spot from the shoreline, she said.
“It just underscores how deceptive the ocean can be,” Schooley
said. “If you’re an inexperienced swimmer, the water can be dangerous
at times. It’s a very hazardous condition unto itself.”
Hot and humid conditions inland and an ocean as warm as bathwater
have drawn scores of people toward the surf, crowding beaches day and
night. But with this has come a rise in drownings, several of which
have occurred after sundown, when lifeguards are not on duty.
The body of high school football standout Drean Rucker, 18, was
recovered Saturday after a search that lasted nearly a week. People
out riding personal watercrafts found the 6-foot-2, 235-pound USC
football recruit at 8:30 in the morning north of the Huntington Beach
Pier.
Rucker disappeared underwater just after 8 p.m. near state beach
lifeguard tower No. 6, between Brookhurst Street and Magnolia Avenue.
He had gone for a swim with friends while attending a cookout at the
beach.
Brown’s death marks the fourth in a series of recent drownings at
Sunset and Huntington beaches. A 14-year-old disappeared while
swimming fully clothed near tower No. 2 at Huntington State Beach,
June 25. Three weeks later, a 22-year-old man drowned while
boogie-boarding at Huntington City Beach.
It’s unfortunate that there have been four drownings countywide in
such a short period in time, Schooley said. “It’s tragic.”
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