Thursday, February 23, 2012

Man drowned in 3-ft deep lake because firefighters 'were not trained' to rescue him

Firemen and police who left a man floating face down in a 3ft-deep lake because they were not trained to enter the water might have saved him had they acted sooner, an inquest heard. Simon Burgess, 41, drowned in a model boating lake after apparently suffering an epileptic seizure while feeding swans. A witness who dialled 999 described begging the first fireman on the scene to help Mr Burgess, but he refused because the water was above “ankle deep”. Instead, emergency crews waited for a specialist water rescue team to arrive, meaning that Mr Burgess was not taken out of the lake until 28 minutes after the alarm had been raised. He was declared dead in hospital.



Gillian Hughes, 53, was feeding ducks with her grandson at Walpole Park in Gosport, Hants, when she saw Mr Burgess, a charity shop worker, in the water. “He looked like he was swimming and had a smile on his face,” she told the inquest in Portsmouth. “The next minute he had stopped and was lying face down.” She said she took off her boots to go in the water herself but her grandson was crying and she was unsure of the man’s state of mind, so she dialled 999. The firemen arrived with the police and I said, 'he’s only been there five or 10 minutes so if you hurry you might save him.’ He just said, 'we’re not allowed,’ and I said, 'but that’s your job.’

She added: “I believe one of the police went in to get him but was told he was not allowed. I said to one of the firemen, 'why don’t you go in?’ and he said they couldn’t if the water was higher than ankle deep. I said, 'you’re having a laugh.’ He said 'no, that’s health and safety.’ Mrs Hughes said that, by the time a specialist crew arrived, Mr Burgess had drifted to the other side of the lake. “After the incident I was unable to sleep because I kept blaming myself and now I have to live with it,” she added. Dr Bret Lockyer, a pathologist, told the inquest that Mr Burgess, who had a history of epilepsy, appeared to have suffered a seizure and drowned. “The seizure would have made it look like he was swimming and explains why he had a grin on his face,” he said.



Tony Nicholls, a watch manager at Gosport fire station, who was first on the scene, said: “The witnesses told me the body had been in the water for five or 10 minutes. There were no obvious signs of life so from that I made an assessment it was a body retrieval and not a rescue. The officers were trained to go into ankle deep water, which is level one, so we waited for level two officers, who can go into chest high. One of the police officers told me he would like to go in the water and I advised him in the strongest terms not to.” Mr Nicholls’s superior, Tim Spencer-Peet, said he had been happy with the watch manager’s decision-making. Coroner David Horsley recorded a verdict of accidental death.

9 comments:

SteveC said...

Scandalous and truly sad.

Anonymous said...

Pardon my language, but that's absolutely f-cking disgusting. If it was a raging river, I could understand their hesitance... but a 3-foot deep pool? When someone's life is potentially at stake? I am ashamed.
Even worse, they probably would have held back and arrested any member of the public who did try to wade in to save him.

Patty O'Heater said...

Just sums up Britain today.

Anonymous said...

This broke my heart, but if there were witnesses, why didn't any of them jump in. Strange story.

Ratz said...

The more people who witness it the less likely anyone is to do anything. It's the bystander effect. There was a case in the the states where a woman was raped and mudered while an entire tenement block watched and nobody even phoned the police because they assumed someone else would do something.

Anonymous said...

"Bystander effect"? I call it the sheep effect.

N.B. - my first Captcha word for this post is "tithos". Yes, please! XD

WilliamRocket said...

Health and Safety ?
I used to spend all my time laughing at what those people from the U.S.A. get up to (pack of idiots) but now the good old U.K. is coming up fast in that stupidity race.
The scariest part though is that the dumb buggers that run the government here in New Zealand, have no brain cells of their own so just follow the UKs lead, so I guess pretty soon I will have to get a permit (after doing a 4 week training course) to hang a curtain in my lounge, as its more than 1 metre from the ground.
I say;
LET THE DARWIN THEORY FEED THE CEMETERIES !
THE STRONG ( AND SMART) SHALL SURVIVE
Badger your government to make it law that all toasters have a label stating "Must eb used in a bath full of water"
Come on, lets make the world a smarter place !!!

WilliamRocket said...

So smart I am unable to spell "be".

Toogie said...

Complicated...the firemen should have waded in...but the f-ing bystanders should have gone in BEFORE the firefighters got there. Then, of course, why was an epileptic adult person wading in a cold pond?