Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Mother drowns trying to rescue 6-year-old son from choppy waters in Pickering

Police say a 33-year-old woman drowned after swimming out in Lake Ontario to fetch her 6-year-old son. The boy was on a floating raft when police say the mother was concerned he had gone too far in the open water – Jul 15, 2019

PICKERING – A 33-year-old woman is dead after trying to rescue her son during a weekend swim in Lake Ontario, police say.

Story continues below advertisement

The incident reportedly happened in Pickering in Frenchmen’s Bay.

Durham Regional Police say the woman’s six-year-old boy was on an inflatable raft in the lake near Pickering when the wind blew him away from shore on Sunday afternoon. With rough waters, police say it made it difficult for swimmers.

“She went after him to try and help,” says Dave Selby with Durham police.

That was when several other people who were there at the time tried to help her as well.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

“They were able to get the kid off the raft and back to shore safely,” says Selby.

While one man was able to rescue the child, police say the mother was unable to swim back and had to be helped to land.

Story continues below advertisement

She was brought to land without vital signs and taken to hospital, where she was pronounced dead.

WATCH: Sounding the alarm in Ontario after recent drownings. Shallima Maharaj reports.

The whole ordeal was a devastating thought for residents in the area that come here often.

“My heart just sank,” says Ainsley Saker. “I’m not a mother, but I could feel the pain with her family. She was trying to save her son and she didn’t come out, which is really sad.”

Story continues below advertisement

People who live here are in shock that something like this could happen in their back yard, but Selby says a drowning can happen anywhere.

“We’ve seen children drown in swimming pools with adults in the area. You really need to be within one arm’s length of that kid to be safe.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article