View Single Post
  #4  
Old 07-23-2007, 02:29 PM
ricki's Avatar
ricki ricki is offline
Administrator
Site Admin
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Florida
Posts: 8,700
Default

More information has been released:

Police identify diver killed by lightning off Deerfield

By Ken Kaye | South Florida Sun-Sentinel
1:55 PM EDT, July 23, 2007

Police identified Stephen Wilson Monday as the 36-year-old man who was struck and killed by lightning while diving in the Atlantic Ocean off Deerfield Beach on Sunday afternoon, authorities said.

The incident took place during an afternoon of severe thunderstorms that pelted the region, from Miami to West Palm Beach, with torrential rains, strong winds and pea-sized hail.

At the time of the strike, about 3 p.m., two divers were on a 20-foot boat and two were in the water, said Deerfield Beach Fire Division Chief Gary Fernaays.When one of the divers in the water surfaced, "lighting struck his tank," Fernaays said. "He was approximately 30 feet from the boat at the time."

Wilson, a Deerfield Beach resident, went under water as the other divers attempted to rescue him. It took about 10 minutes for them to get the victim into the boat, Fernaays said. During that time, they radioed for help. Then they drove the boat toward shore and beached it in the 600 block of North Ocean Boulevard, where Deerfield Fire-Rescue already was waiting, Fernaays said.

Wilson, who had gone into cardiac arrest, was given CPR. He was taken to North Broward Medical Center in Pompano Beach, where he was pronounced dead, authorities said.

In Margate, lightning also struck a two-story house in the 3000 block of Green Turtle Place, leaving a hole in the roof about 3 feet in diameter and setting a second-floor bedroom on fire, Police Sgt. Andy Zettek said. There were no injuries, as no one was home. The blaze left the home uninhabitable, he said.

The reason squally weather hit so hard on Sunday: Two lines of thunderstorms converged on South Florida from two different directions, said meteorologist Dan Gregoria of the National Weather Service, in Miami.

"Storms developed along the Atlantic coast and started to move inland," he said. "Other storms developed out over the Everglades and moved into the metro areas as well."

East-central Broward County was hit hardest, receiving about 2 to 3 inches of rain, Gregoria said. The weather service issued an urban flood advisory, though no serious flooding was reported on Sunday, other than puddles in streets and low-lying areas.

In Palm Beach County, the metro areas received between .25 and .6 inches of rain, although about 2 inches fell right at the county line, said weather service meteorologist Barry Baxter.

A tornado was reported at about 3:10 p.m. in the 2100 block of Northwest 29th Court in Oakland Park, but officials couldn't confirm that a twister actually touched down.

Even so, the weather in that area was "really bad," said Richard Tingley, a Broward Sheriff's Office communications operator who lives near there.

"There was a lot of rain and wind," he said. "You couldn't even see the car in front of you."

Today's forecast: a 60 percent chance of more showers and thunderstorms.

Staff Writer Alva James-Johnson contributed to this report.

Ken Kaye can be reached at kkaye@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7911. sentinel.com or 954-385-7911.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sfl-flbw...a_tab01_layout
__________________
FKA, Inc.

transcribed by:
Rick Iossi
Reply With Quote