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Tragedy on Rush LakeBy MaryHelen Swanson Grant Allen Jestus, of Blaine, fell from a moving boat driven by his father near Mattsonís Landing around 5 p.m., Saturday, May 24. His body was recovered in 11 feet of water approximately 75 yards from shore nearly 2 hours later. The boy was taken by ambulance to a site by Tanger Outlet Center where he was transferred to a Life Link III air ship and taken to Hennepin County Medical Center. When the boy was found in the lake, paramedics immediately began resuscitation in the ambulance on shore. At the hospital, the attempt was made to revive the child using a modern slow-warming method which has in some instances been successful in reviving young children. Jestus was pronounced dead at 11 p.m. The water temperature was 67 and the lake was very weedy in that area. The boy was not wearing his lifejacket at the time he fell into the water, Hoppe said. Hoppe said no one in the area reported seeing a child in the water. With local officials on the scene, nearby residents in boats and pontoons helped searched the lake at first. Members of the Isanti County Dive and Rescue Team made attempts to locate the boy. A Minnesota State Patrol helicopter arrived and circled the bay area with a thermal imaging camera, which senses heat. The helicopter search was not successful. It entails securing five boats side-by-side and slowly moving backward dragging a wire device by hand. The search team was on the second pass when the boy was found. He was immediately taken to shore and carried to the ambulance. Deputy Hoppe drove the ambulance to North Branch. The Chisago County Sheriffís Department, Isanti County Dive and Rescue Team, the Minnesota DNR, the Minnesota State Patrol, the Rush City Fire Department and Lakes Region EMS all responded to the scene. Several of the neighbors along the lake have placed flowers on the dock and a floating wreath has been set in the lake to remember the little boy. According to a neighbor, Jestus loved the water. The funeral service for Grant Jestus is 2 p.m., Thursday, May 29 at Salem Covenant Church in New Brighton. Floatation devices a must A readily accessible U.S. Coast Guard approved life jacket must be on board all boats for each person on board. New Federal regulations require that children under 13 (not in a cabin or below deck) must wear a PFD on all recreational boats while underway on waters subject to federal jurisdiction such as the St. Croix and Mississippi rivers, Lake Superior, etc. Additionally, all life jackets must be in serviceable condition, free of tears, rot, punctures and water-logging. Type IV throwable devices, such as buoyant cushions, are no longer acceptable primary lifesaving devices. ©ECM Post Review |