Date: Fri 21-Jun-1996
Date: Fri 21-Jun-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Lake
Full Text:
Marine Police Officers Rescue Three Fishermen
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The Lake Zoar Marine Police came to the rescue of three fishermen whose canoe
capsized June 16 on Lake Zoar. The three were in peril of drowning, according
to Lake Zoar Marine Police Chief Joseph Steinfeld.
Chief Steinfeld said June 17 that he and Greg Saad, a Lake Zoar Marine Police
safety patrol officer, were traveling upriver on the 11-mile-long body of
water at about 11 am on June 16 when they overtook a canoe that also was
traveling upriver.
Just after the 16-foot-long marine police patrol boat passed the 12-foot-long
canoe, the chief and Officer Saad heard a shout for help and then a splashing
sound. Looking back, they saw that the overloaded canoe had capsized and the
three men who had been in it were struggling to say afloat by grasping onto
buoyant seat cushions and a floating picnic cooler, Chief Steinfeld said,
noting that the boaters had no life vests.
As the patrol boat moved in for a rescue, the marine police threw the three
men a large life ring for buoyancy. All three were rescued without injuries
and brought into the patrol boat, the chief said.
Of the fast response to the men is distress, Chief Steinfeld termed it "just
an instantaneous type of thing."
The capsizing took place just downriver of the Silver Bridge in Sandy Hook. It
happened in the area where several massive cut-stone pillars, which formerly
carried railroad tracks, jut up out of the river near Pootatuck Park.
The three boaters went into the water on the east side of the river, about 30
feet from shore, in an area where the water is quite deep, according to the
chief.
Chief Steinfeld identified the canoe operator as Ronald R. LaPlante, 41, of
Waterbury. In the canoe with him were two of his nephews: Adam Brunelli, about
18 years old, from Waterbury, and Ron Weaver of Naugatuck, who is in his early
20s, Chief Steinfeld said.
The canoe was propelled by a 5« horsepower gasoline engine. It was seriously
overloaded by the men's weight and the various objects in it, according to
Chief Steinfeld. Putting that amount of weight in that small a boat violated
the rules of common sense, he said.
Mr LaPlante was the best swimmer of the three; one of the passengers could
basically only tread water, and the second passenger wasn't capable of
swimming, Chief Steinfeld said. "You never saw three individuals so grateful
to be alive."
Chief Steinfeld estimated that between the time the marine patrol passed by
the three boaters and the time they were rescued, about one minute had
elapsed.
At the time of the incident, the sky was clear, the air temperature was in the
80s and the water temperature was in the 70s, the chief said. There were
one-foot swells on the river.
The Lake Zoar Marine Police unit was organized to promote water safety.
