Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Sinkhole Swallows Florida Resident

Into the Abyss with No Way Out

By Robert A. Waters

Just after 11:00 P.M. on February 28, 2013, thirty-seven-year-old Jeffrey Bush (pictured above) went to bed. A roadside assistance worker, i.e., a "road ranger," for the Florida Department of Transportation, Jeffrey had to get up early the following morning.

His brother, Jeremy, along with several other family members, lived in a four-bedroom home on 240 Faithway Drive in Seffner. 

The Tampa Bay Times reported that "Jeremy Bush just went to bed when he heard what sounded like a car hitting the house. Then screams from his brother Jeffrey's bedroom.

"'Help me! Help me!'

"Someone flipped the lights. Jeremy, 36, threw the door open, revealing a sight that defied belief: The earth had opened beneath his brother's bedroom and was swallowing everything in sight. The tip of Jeffrey's mattress was the only thing left, and it was sinking into a churning sinkhole."

Jeremy didn't hesitate. He jumped into the vast hole and reached to grab his brother. An ever-shifting quick-sand-like mound of dirt sucked at Jeremy's legs as his brother disappeared into the black abyss. 

Meanwhile, a family member called 9-1-1.

Jeremy clawed at the dirt, trying to rescue his brother from the cavern. Stunned, Jeremy screamed his brother's name. Over and over. In his panic to save Jeffrey, Jeremy didn't realize that he, too, was in grave danger.

According to USA Today, "within minutes, a sheriff's deputy arrived and helped pull him from the hole, telling him the ground was still crumbling around them...They ran out of the home. No one ever went inside again."

 The family escaped and gathered outside. Hugging, crying, praying, they watched as dozens of rescue vehicles surged into the neighborhood. Cops, EMTs and state experts on natural disasters gathered in clusters, trying to figure out what to do. Should they send a team in to try to save Jeffrey? Should they evacuate neighbors? Could the home be saved, or should it be razed?

Authorities seemed stumped. Jeremy stood in the crowd of neighbors who had now lined up outside. He and other family members were angry that none of the so-called rescuers seemed willing to go into the belly of the beast to try to save Jeffrey. 

Later in the day, Hillsborough County Fire Rescue officials decided to use state of the art equipment to look into the hole. They set up cameras and a listening device and lowered them into the cavern. But soon the ever-moving ground swallowed the equipment. Shortly after that, authorities condemned the home.

Jeremy said, "They say [the hole] keeps getting bigger and I don't think they're going to find him. I think he'll be in that hole forever."

Florida is sometimes called the sinkhole capital of America. The Orlando Sentinel reported that "central Florida--particularly the Interstate 4 corridor--is more susceptible to sinkholes than the rest of the state because of its geology. Its subdivisions, shopping malls, schools and roads are built on Florida's sponge-like crust of limestone, which is full of cavities and cracks that sometimes collapse."

Three days after the sinkhole engulfed much of the home on Faithway Drive, demolition began. A backhoe operator cautiously approached and began tearing apart the cinder-block house. Crews were available to salvage what they could for the family. They managed to save a centuries-old family Bible with baptismal records, a few portraits, a purse, two antique rifles, and a jewelry box. 

Relatives reminisced about Jeffrey. He loved his family, they said, especially his young niece. Just a few days earlier, he had cooked the family a pork chop supper. 

So is Jeffrey still entombed in the earth beneath where his bedroom sat? One theory is that the chasm carried him down into the aquifer. From there, county officials told the family, he may drift into the Alafia River. But an environmental scientist told reporters it's more likely the body "sunk into a 60-foot-tall water-filled void between the sinkhole and the bedrock and is trapped in sediment."

The first cop to arrive at the scene, Hillsborough County Sheriff's Deputy Douglas Duval, spoke to reporters. "These are everyday working people, " he said. "They're good people. You guys out there, if you know these people, if you know this neighborhood, pray for them."

Saturday, August 17, 2024

"We've Got to Hide!"

James III and Acelin Persyn
14-Year-Old Boy Saves University Student

By Robert A. Waters

For obvious reasons, the victim in this story has not been publicly identified. She was kidnapped at gunpoint from the Student Activity Center parking lot of Central Michigan University, driven to a nearby home, and raped. Then her abductor, Eric Ramsey, 30, wrapped her upper body with clear packing tape, pinning her arms to her sides, and forced her into the passenger seat of her own car. He showed the victim two cans of gasoline and told her he planned to kill her and cremate her body. As the car sped along at close to 50-miles-per-hour, the victim managed to open the car door and roll out onto the road. Breaking her arm in the fall, and still wrapped in tape, the victim ran for her life.

Here's where our part of the story starts.

It was nearing midnight in a small Shepherd, Michigan residence. 

The Associated Press reported that "James Persyn III, 14, was home alone with his 11-year-old sister and 2-year-old brother Wednesday night when a Central Michigan University student started banging on the door and screaming for help." 

James, who had been playing video games as his siblings, Acelin and Angus, romped about the living room, later told reporters: "[The victim's] voice was, like, she was going to die if I didn't open that door. I let her in and she asked me if my parents were home. I told her no. She said, 'We've got to hide. I was just kidnapped and I jumped out of a vehicle. We've got to hide now!'"

The teenager saw the woman's battered, bruised, and bloodied face. He noticed her now-useless arm cradled against her chest. But even more horrifying, he observed the victim's body wrapped in that weird-looking packing tape.

James quickly locked the door, then ran to the side door and locked it. He herded his sister and brother and the injured woman into the bathroom. He then ran into his bedroom and retrieved his hunting knife and his dog. As the others cowered in the bath tub, James turned out the lights and used his cell phone to call his father. Then he handed his phone to the victim to call 9-1-1.

Eric Ramsey had stopped his car in the driveway and began trying to force the door open. He screamed over and over, "Let me in or I'll kill you."

James' father, James, Jr., had made a quick run in his car to pick up his fiancee from work. When he got the call from James III, he turned around and flew home. 

John Carlisle, of the Detroit Free Press, described the scene inside the house: "There they were--a rape victim, a dog too friendly to offer much protection, and three frightened children, hiding in the dark, convinced they were about to die at the hands of a man trying to get inside. And the only thing that stood between them and him was a 5-foot-8, 142-pound 14-year-old boy holding a small knife."

Ramsey seemed out-of-control psychotic. But no matter how loud he screamed or how hard he slammed his shoulder against the door, he couldn't get inside. After several minutes, the ex-con ran back to the car, grabbed a can of gasoline, and poured it against the base of the house. Then he lit it and fled.

Acelin had resigned herself to her fate--which she figured was death. She kept calling for James. "I wanted him to come in the bathtub with me and just hug each other and say goodbye," she said. "I didn't know what was going to happen, if we didn't make it, if [the assailant] actually did make it in here and my dad didn't get home in time."

James, Jr., hoping to catch the attacker by surprise, turned off his car lights as he neared his home. But by that time, the man had fled. To the father's horror, however, he saw flames billowing up from the front of the house.

Carlisle wrote: "[James, Jr.] roared up in his car, scrambled out and began throwing his body against the flames to extinguish them. He tried opening the locked doors, but he had no key, so he started trying to break windows to get inside."

Finally, a deputy pulled up. And then, dozens of cops, sirens blazing and lights flashing, seemed to appear out of nowhere. (James, Jr. later said he considered himself lucky he didn't get shot by the first deputy who appeared and thought he was the suspect.) Finally, deputies extinguished the blaze .

The victim was transported to a local hospital. As the story emerged, cops got a bead on where Ramsey was headed. For the next hour, they chased the suspect through several small towns in the area. When they cornered him, he used his cell phone to write a final message on his Facebook page: "Well folkes i'm about to get shot. Peace."

He was right. When he approached officers holding a fake pistol, they gunned him down. After his death, it was learned that he'd just been released early from prison on an assault charge.

NOTE:  This story happened a few years ago. While some armchair critics questioned whether James III should have opened that door, he was given an award for saving the life of the victim.