evile: (clutter)
evile ([personal profile] evile) wrote2004-06-17 02:25 pm

2286Another great parenting story in the news


    Jun. 17, 2004

     

     

    http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/Southwest/06/17/downtown.drownings.ap/index
    .html

    3 die trying to save drowning girl at Fort Worth park
    Thursday, June 17, 2004 Posted: 10:23 AM EDT (1423 GMT)



    Two people are carried on stretchers up the steps of the Water
    Gardens in Fort Worth, Texas, Wednesday.





    FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- An 8-year-old girl drowned and three
    people, including her father and brother, died while trying to rescue
    her from a decorative pool where "No swimming" signs were posted.

    The Rev. Gerald M. Dew, pastor of Antioch Missionary Baptist Church
    in Chicago, said the man and children had gone to the Fort Worth
    Water Gardens to play because the pool at their nearby hotel was
    closed. The 5.4-acre water garden has pools with powerful motors to
    circulate water through fountains and waterfalls.

    Dew identified those who drowned Wednesday as Myron Dukes, 35; his
    daughter Lauren, 8; his son Christopher, 13; and an unrelated 11-year-
    old girl, whose name was not released pending family notification.

    Witness accounts varied on what happened. Apparently, Lauren Dukes
    jumped or slipped into the water and the 11-year-old girl fell in
    when she tried to reach in and help her. Lauren's father and brother
    then jumped in to try to save the girls.

    One witness, Christian Tillis, 14, said he saw the girls slip into
    the water and tried to help.

    "I dived in after them. I felt a little-bitty hand, but it slipped
    out," he said. "And then I had to get out because I couldn't breathe."

    Dot Kent, a spokeswoman for the city of Fort Worth, said "no
    swimming" signs are posted in the park and near the pool. She said
    she understood that the little girls had on swimsuits when their
    bodies were recovered.

    A pump at the bottom of the pool that pulls water to a waterfall
    apparently created a suction that made rescues difficult, Fire
    Department spokesman Lt. Kent Worley said.

    "A young person would not have the strength or the knowledge of how
    to get away from it," he said.

    Jesse Spann, one of the church's deacons, said there are no barriers
    around the area and that steps lead down to the swirling pool. "As a
    child, when you see a waterfall, you think you can go play and swim
    there," he said.

    All four victims were in town for the five-day National Baptist
    Sunday School Convention. At the hotel, church members gathered in a
    conference room to hug, cry and pray. Gospel hymns played on a tape
    recorder.

    Worley said the Water Gardens would remain closed until police finish
    investigating the drownings. A memorial ceremony was planned for
    Thursday at the park.

    Designed by architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee, the gardens
    are free to enter and a common refuge from hot Texas days. Each
    minute, 19,000 gallons of water courses through the garden, according
    to the Fort Worth Convention and Visitors Center.

    Worley said in the park's 30-year history, "we have never had an
    incident such as this."

    Standing before his teary-eyed church members in the hotel conference
    room, Dew struggled to find the words that would console his flock
    following the tragedy.

    "The word that God told me to tell them was that he's still in charge
    and he's still in control, and that we only see the beginning, but
    God sees the beginning and the end, so we have to just hope in him,"
    Dew said.