_UPDATE:  Three swimmers rescued, one remains missing_ 
(http://asburyparksun.com/after-one-swimmer-rescued-in-asbury-his-brother-remains-missing/)
   
They entered water just after lifeguards left beach

By Molly Mulshine 
 




 
____________________________________
Three swimmers were rescued from the ocean off of Second Avenue beach this  
evening and a fourth is missing after he entered the water in an attempt to 
 rescue his younger sister, officials have said. 
The victims entered the water just after the lifeguards left the beach 
around  5 p.m., head lifeguard Joe Bongiovanni said. Bongiovanni did a sweep of 
the  beach after the guards left and, seeing no one in the water, retired to 
his  office to lock it up, he said. 
At 5:15 p.m., he heard sirens and rushed to the beach. He entered the water 
 at Second Avenue and first found two young men who were exhausted from 
being  caught in a rip tide. He handed them his torpedo — the red piece of 
lifeguarding  equipment with a bullet-like shape and handles on both sides — 
and 
they used it  to stay afloat, he said. 
He and the male victims were 50 to 100 yards away from the shoreline when 
he  saw a young girl in distress another 20 to 30 yards out, he said. He told 
her to  lay flat on her back while he came to get her. 
By this time, Patty Landers, another lifeguard who had heard the commotion  
while she was leaving work for the day, had returned to the beach and 
entered  the water, Bongiovanni said. She swam toward the young girl and the 
two 
were  picked up by a private boat after Landers flagged it down, Bongiovanni 
said. 
A member of the Asbury Park Fire Department paddled out into the water on a 
 rescue board and pulled Bongiovanni and the two male victims in, 
Bongiovanni  said. 
Then, while Bongiovanni and Landers were interviewing the girl, she told 
them  she had seen her brother enter the water in an attempt to rescue her, 
but that  he had disappeared, Bongiovanni said. Her other brother, who had 
been on the  beach as well, said he saw the same thing. 
When officials learned there was a fourth victim who was still missing, 
they  called in the regional ANSWER [Area Network of Shore Water Emergency 
Responders]  team and the United States Coast Guard, who were still searching 
for the young  man several hours later. The search will re-commence at 8 a.m. 
tomorrow,  Bongiovanni said. 
Tonight, officials used everything from traditional lifeguard equipment to  
jet skis and boats to try and recover the missing fourth swimmer. Tomorrow  
morning, they will also employ the help of technology known as side scan 
sonar,  fire department battalion chief Nick Marino said. Side scan sonar 
sweeps the  bottom of the ocean searching for figures that could be swimmers, 
Marino said.  If the sonar detects anything, divers jump into the water and 
see if the object  is a drowning victim. 
The young female victim and her other brother who had remained on the beach 
 were reunited at the police station, Bongiovanni said. It was unclear to  
officials at the beach what the relationship of the other two young men in 
the  water was to them, if any. 
Bongiovanni said it was likely those two had also entered the water in an  
attempt to rescue the girl. 
“This wouldn’t have happened” if lifeguards were on duty, Bongiovanni 
said.  “We would have prevented it.” 
For someone who can’t swim, sitting on the beach while someone is drowning  
rather than jumping in and trying to save them is “a frustrating thing,”  
Bongiovanni said. “But if you go in, you can become the second victim.” 
Water was slightly rougher than usual today but the tide changed late in 
the  day, Bongiovanni said — and there were no saves on the beach today while 
the  lifeguards were on duty. 
When the lifeguards feel the water is threatening, they stay on duty past  
their usual 5 p.m. cutoff time, Bongiovanni said. This past weekend, for  
example, lifeguards stayed until 7 p.m. on both Saturday and Sunday because 
the  water was rough, he said. 

Steve Herman,  805 6th ave, AP


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