Inmates on work crew save 3 boys from frigid Washington river

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Rescue officials say a group of inmates on a prison work crew dove into a fast-moving, frigid Washington state river to save three young brothers who were dumped in the water after their canoe capsized.

KPTV reports the inmate crew from Larch Corrections Center was finishing their work for the day near the river when they heard the children's screams.

"We just thought it was some kids screaming until we seen their two heads bobbing in the water with the canoe upside down," Nelson Pettis, a member of the crew told KPTV. "They were coming down over flooded Salmon Creek. It was raging pretty fast."

The three brothers, aged 8, 10 and 16, had lost control of their boat in the strong current. Pettis says he and another inmate Larry Bohn jumped into the river.

"I just let the current take me down until I could get to a spot where my feet hit ground and I tried to stay put. They actually came to me right there," Pettis told KPTV. "Right then, the current swept me from underneath my feet and I grabbed onto the kids and got them to a little island in the middle of the river."

Bohn helped the 16-year-old to shore and then helped Pettis and the two younger boys get onto a pile of floating debris in the creek until they could be rescued. Another inmate, Jon Fowler, helped the rescue crew carry the boys to shore.

"They were really scared," Bohn told KPTV. "They kept telling us 'thank you, thank you' all over again."

Clark County Fire District 6 Chief Jerry Green says the three boys and two inmates were taken to nearby hospitals with mild hypothermia.

"I think we did something that any good person would do. You see three helpless kids in a river, you help. That's what you do," Fowler told KPTV.

"Just cause we're incarcerated, doesn't mean we're bad people, " he later added. "We made some bad choices in our lives, but we're still, we're just like everybody else. We're just paying our debt for what we did wrong."

Prison staff tells KPTV the members of the work crew are serving sentences for non-violent crimes.

Read more: Inmates on work crew save 3 boys from frigid Washington river | Fox News
 

BobWolf

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Moral of the storry?, You cant judge a book by its cover.
At risk of sounding like a bleed heart I think these guys earned some recognition for thier sentence if theyre non violent criminals and otherwise have decent behavior. They could have been chicken schit cowards and let the kids drown. No, they jumped into fast moving water most likely without safety gear or swift water training and saved three lives. I have taken swift/deep/cold water rescue training and know cold water can kill you within a couple minnites depending on water temp, and other factors.

My water rescue team and I have trained many times outdoor air temp 20 - 25 deg f, water as low as 25 - 30 deg f, if not colder and yes at times we have to remove ice to train. Anyone who has been emersed into water less than 50 deg without without a cold wet suit knows the first thing you feel is extreme pain all over your body, then cold, then your limbs dont want to work this takes place rapidly. Thats the first thing you learn so hopefuly you dont panic. Even with training its still a shock to the systeme.

B.T.W. Did the Corrections Officers do anything?

Bob Wolf.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Moral of the storry?, You cant judge a book by its cover.
At risk of sounding like a bleed heart I think these guys earned some recognition for thier sentence if theyre non violent criminals and otherwise have decent behavior. They could have been chicken schit cowards and let the kids drown. No, they jumped into fast moving water most likely without safety gear or swift water training and saved three lives. I have taken swift/deep/cold water rescue training and know cold water can kill you within a couple minnites depending on water temp, and other factors.

My water rescue team and I have trained many times outdoor air temp 20 - 25 deg f, water as low as 25 - 30 deg f, if not colder and yes at times we have to remove ice to train. Anyone who has been emersed into water less than 50 deg without without a cold wet suit knows the first thing you feel is extreme pain all over your body, then cold, then your limbs dont want to work this takes place rapidly. Thats the first thing you learn so hopefuly you dont panic. Even with training its still a shock to the systeme.

B.T.W. Did the Corrections Officers do anything?

Bob Wolf.

I am surprised the corrections officers didn't shoot the what looked to be escaping prisoners and the kids would have drowned....
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Moral of the storry?, You cant judge a book by its cover.
At risk of sounding like a bleed heart I think these guys earned some recognition for thier sentence if theyre non violent criminals and otherwise have decent behavior. They could have been chicken schit cowards and let the kids drown. No, they jumped into fast moving water most likely without safety gear or swift water training and saved three lives. I have taken swift/deep/cold water rescue training and know cold water can kill you within a couple minnites depending on water temp, and other factors.

My water rescue team and I have trained many times outdoor air temp 20 - 25 deg f, water as low as 25 - 30 deg f, if not colder and yes at times we have to remove ice to train. Anyone who has been emersed into water less than 50 deg without without a cold wet suit knows the first thing you feel is extreme pain all over your body, then cold, then your limbs dont want to work this takes place rapidly. Thats the first thing you learn so hopefuly you dont panic. Even with training its still a shock to the systeme.

B.T.W. Did the Corrections Officers do anything?

Bob Wolf.

example...Medal of honor awardee gets prison time for writing bad checks....does that make him less of a war hero?.....he made a life error, a bad decision...
 

BobWolf

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Just because somone dose time dosent make them a bad person. Twelve years ago when I ran a construction busines I hired an ex con he was just released after serving 3 yrs of a 5 yr stint for a drug posession. I gave him a shot and he turned out to be one of my best employees. The only ex-cons I have no use for would be a child molester or rapist. Lets keep the statement simple not get into technicalities of what makes it a crime. We all have to admit to making some stupid choices that should have gotten us all locked up at one time or annother.

Bob Wolf.
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
I am surprised the corrections officers didn't shoot the what looked to be escaping prisoners and the kids would have drowned....


I'm surprised that doing the right thing is considered newsworthy - are we that far gone, that we don't expect people to try to save lives in an emergency?
I'm not a prisoner and never have been, [though I joke about being an exCon, that means ConWay Now] but I believe I'd have jumped in too, if I saw kids struggling. Really - wouldn't anyone do the same?
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I'm surprised that doing the right thing is considered newsworthy - are we that far gone, that we don't expect people to try to save lives in an emergency?
I'm not a prisoner and never have been, [though I joke about being an exCon, that means ConWay Now] but I believe I'd have jumped in too, if I saw kids struggling. Really - wouldn't anyone do the same?

No, many would do nothing. Too many times I have seen people just stand around and watch people in trouble rather than helping. They are afraid for their own safety or law suits. Even worse, I have seen them drool over the chance to leer at bodies or injured people.

These guys should be commended for their actions.
 

Dreamer

Administrator Emeritus
Charter Member
Some of the best people I know have been/are in prison. A lot of good people do stupid stuff...they're just honest enough to admit 'yep, I messed up, I'll do the time'

In an age when people don't want to get involved for fear of lawsuits, or just don't care enough to risk their lives, it is newsworthy when someone is a hero and puts another's life first.
The fact that it was inmates just shows that people society may be ready to 'throw away' still have a hero in them.

Ok..Lifetime movie moment over!


Dale
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
I'm surprised that doing the right thing is considered newsworthy - are we that far gone, that we don't expect people to try to save lives in an emergency?
Should this story NOT be newsworthy because the rescuers were convicts? Every time someone jumps in a river to save drowning kids, it's a newsworthy event regardless of who is doing the jumping. If they had been forest rangers or firefighters or Boy Scouts or just hikers in the woods it would have been newsworthy. In every story like this one, somewhere in the telling of the story you will usually find out who the rescuer is and what they do for a living. This one is no different.
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
It's not who the rescuers were that surprised me, it's that rescuing kids is considered newsworthy - it just seems to me that it's something anyone would do in the same situation.
Rescuing adults, maybe not so much - but kids? It's human nature to protect them. I'd jump in - so sue me. [Always wanted to say that, lol.]
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
You would jump in, these days, many would not. They just leave them in their cars to freeze or roast.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
It's not who the rescuers were that surprised me, it's that rescuing kids is considered newsworthy - it just seems to me that it's something anyone would do in the same situation.
Wow.
It surprises me that it surprises you that kids being rescued from a raging river is newsworthy.

Rescuing adults, maybe not so much - but kids? It's human nature to protect them. I'd jump in - so sue me. [Always wanted to say that, lol.]
And if you jumped in, and the news media got wind of it, you'd be on the news, too.

Kids go on and into the river, and come off and out of it all the time. But when kids are pulled out of a river in a grave or dangerous situation, regardless of their condition after being pulled out, it's news.

Works for a lake, too.

Boy drowns in lake.
Boy pulled from lake, saved from drowning.

Both are equally newsworthy.

Canoe overturns, spills three into river. All three drowned in raging waters. News
Canoe tips, spills three into river. All three rescued from raging waters. News

Boy falls off boats, climbs back in with the help of friend. Not news. :D
 

aristotle

Veteran Expediter
I'm surprised that doing the right thing is considered newsworthy - are we that far gone, that we don't expect people to try to save lives in an emergency?
I'm not a prisoner and never have been, [though I joke about being an exCon, that means ConWay Now] but I believe I'd have jumped in too, if I saw kids struggling. Really - wouldn't anyone do the same?

Somehow, this conjures up images of Shelley Winters' heroics in the Poseidon Adventure. Gray lady down!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dd03qev59Jo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqYAcknQOiI
 
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cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
A good movie - if a little too much screaming for my taste, lol.

PS "Gray lady" refers to the ship, yes?
;)
 
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