Breaking News Stories

New York Firefighter Drowns While Trying To Save Daughter from Rough Currents

A New York firefighter drowned Friday while trying to save his daughter who was caught in a raging current.

New York Fire Department (FDNY) firefighter Mark Batista, 39, said his teenage daughter was caught in a rip current while he was with his family at Sylvania Beach, near Avon-by-the-Sea. reported. new york post. Batista reportedly jumped into the water to save her daughter, but both were lost.

Rescuers rescued the girl, but Batista was found underwater about an hour and a half later and pronounced dead at the Jersey Shore University Medical Center, The New York Post reported.

Lifeguards were not on duty at the beach at the time of the accident, according to NBC New York report. According to NBC New York, Jersey Shore residents said such accidents usually occur when people enter the water without lifeguards present. (RELATED: 15-year-old student reportedly drowns in high school pool)

Rip currents are “fast-flowing, powerful, narrow channels prevalent along the shores of the East, Gulf, West, and Great Lakes of the United States,” and “sometimes faster than an Olympic swimmer.” according to to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

According to NOAA, swimmers should float rather than fight if caught in a rip current, and should call for help rather than trying to save a person caught in the current.

Share this post:

Leave a Reply