Accident Database

Report ID#69113

1989-07-24
accident date
unknown Skateboarder
victim
0
victim age
Albuquerque River
river
n/a
section
n/a
location
Flash Flood
gage
Flood
water level
II
river difficulty
Flush Drowning
cause code(s)
Does not Apply
injury type(s)
Other
factors
Private
trip type
Other
boat type
status?
status

Description

FLASH FLOOD KILLS SKATEBOARDER Albuquerque River: July 24, 1989 DESCRIPTION: Four teenaged boys were skateboarding in the concrete-lined bed of the Albuquerque River in Arizona when disaster hit. A flash flood roared down the riverbed and carried the boys downstream. Rescuers stretched a line across the river; one of the boys grabbed hold and held on until knocked loose by a floating chaise lounge. He was carried downstream into a dam followed by an underground section and killed. A police officer who had wrapped the rope around his arm received a disabling injury when the rope came under tension. This rescue was covered by television news and is used widely in rescue training. ANALYSIS: This was a horrible rescue site; the police, wearing street shoes could barely keep their footing on the wet, sloping concrete banks. The officer who wrapped the line around his arm made a terrible mistake and is badly injured as a result. Rescuers should never wrap a rope around a part of their body. When the line comes under tension, the resulting pressure can cause serious injury. A positive result: the development of the “Arroyo Rescue Curtain by Sandia Laboratories. The rope, set at an angle to the current, reduces strain on the system by 75% while helping victims hold on and work their way to shore.