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Drowning saddens
neighborhood
Story and photos by Danna Webster, KP
News
A young
Tacoma woman was the victim of a drowning accident Labor
Day weekend at Palmer Lake. Divers recovered Lan Phong
Le-Nguyen’s body about 24 hours after the accident. The
22-year-old was visiting members of her family for a
housewarming celebration.

The family of Lan Phong Le-Nguen watches as
a search
and rescue team is trying to locate the
woman after she
disappeared under water hours before |
Divers
began their search in a 20-foot diameter around the area
where witnesses believed she went under. According to
rescue diver Deputy Bruce Johnston of the Pierce County
Metro Dive Team, a 16-year-old cousin of the victim was
on a blow-up floating island and Le-Nguyen was swimming
to the raft with a noodle under each arm because she was
a poor swimmer. The cousin grabbed her to help her onto
the float but was pulled into the water. That action
caused the island to squirt off and the cousin swam to
retrieve the island. The cousin held the island and
looked back but the woman was gone. No one saw the
actual spot and it was difficult to know how far the
raft had moved.
Fire
District 16 water rescue personnel were first on the
scene and searched the surface and shore during what is
called the golden hour. That is the time when there is a
chance the victim can be revived. After the first hour,
the rescue mode shifts to a recovery mode. Four divers
from the sheriff’s dive team responded at 2 p.m. and
searched until dark. They were unsuccessful. They
brought the boat back again the next day, Labor Day
Monday.

The sheriff's dive team worked two days to
recover the
body of the victim. The exact location of
the incident
was unknown. Divers checked logical points
and
searched within a 20-foot diameter circle. |
The mood
of the neighborhood was somber and still. As family
members watched from the porch deck of the lake house,
neighbors watched from a pier and along the shore. About
2:30 p.m., two divers were making a final attempt to
locate the body. “I went out first, and made four more
passes,” Johnston said. Then Deputy Brent Van Dyke went
out and saw what he thought was a pink handkerchief,
finding the body. She was 150 feet south of the original
search area in about 7 feet of water.
The crew
was careful to keep the body from the view of the family
and asked them to return to the house rather than watch
the recovery. Johnston said the family was very helpful
and considerate of their work through the entire effort.

Neighbors
watch recovery efforts as a somber mood
covers the neighborhood |
Ten
members of the Pierce County Metro Dive Team dive team
worked on this recovery effort. Two Key Peninsula
divers, Deputy Brian Stepp and Officer Joshua Boyd, are
members of that team but neither was on duty at the time
of the accident. The recovery effort took a total of 80
hours worth of work.
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