Australian Off-Duty Police Officer Drowns in Rip After Saving Teen

Australian Off-Duty Police Officer Drowns in Rip After Saving Teen
Surf rescue workers instruct swimmers to move away from the northern end of the beach at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia on January 16, 2022. (Photo by Jenny Evans/Getty Images)
AAP
By AAP
1/1/2023
Updated:
1/1/2023

An off-duty police officer has drowned in a rip after saving the life of a teenage boy at an unpatrolled beach on the New South Wales (NSW) south coast.

Emergency services were called after the 45-year-old became caught in a rip at Bogola Beach, south of Narooma, at about 1.30 p.m. on New Year’s Day.

When lifesavers arrived at the scene, onlookers told them the man went into the ocean to rescue a 14-year-old boy, but after saving the teen, he disappeared under the water, Surf Life Saving NSW chief executive Steven Pearce said.

A helicopter was sent from Moruya and spotted the man who was pulled from the rip by lifesavers, but paramedics were unable to revive him, and he died at the scene.

Trainee members of the Garie Vanguard Surf Life Saving group paddle out during a mock ocean rescue at Garie Beach in Sydney, Australia on Nov. 24, 2019. (Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)
Trainee members of the Garie Vanguard Surf Life Saving group paddle out during a mock ocean rescue at Garie Beach in Sydney, Australia on Nov. 24, 2019. (Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)

“It’s a really, really tragic incident, and we have numerous cases each year ... where someone goes into the rescue and they, in turn, become the victim and the person they went to rescue successfully escapes the rip they were caught in,” Pearce told AAP.

NSW Police confirmed the man who died was an off-duty officer. Local police will prepare a report for the coroner.

With warm temperatures driving thousands of people to the state’s beaches this summer, NSW lifesavers have already carried out more than 1000 rescues since Christmas, which is a record.

“We’ve never ever seen this before,” Pearce said.

Akos Melegh and John DeLauney patrol the waters on a IRB (Inflatable Rescue Boat) at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia on December 9, 2007. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
Akos Melegh and John DeLauney patrol the waters on a IRB (Inflatable Rescue Boat) at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia on December 9, 2007. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

“So the primary message today, particularly because it’s such a bumper day for the beach, is: we’re urging people to go to a patrolled location, and that’s anywhere with a red and yellow flag flying and where our lifesavers, and our lifeguards, are on duty.”