Firefighters Rescue Woman, Man, Dog from Rain-Swollen Los Angeles River

Firefighters with dog in Los Angeles river
人们观看从桥作为洛杉矶消防Department rescue crew try to rescue a dog from the LA river in the Studio City section of Los Angeles on Monday, March 28, 2022. Two people and a dog were rescued from a rain-swollen Southern California river Monday as a vigorous late-season storm moved slowly through the state, bringing heavy showers and snow. A helicopter rescue crew pulled the dog's owner, a woman, from the rushing Los Angeles River, in the San Fernando Valley, around 2:40 p.m. But the dog slipped away and continued for more than an hour down the river, which runs through an inaccessible channel with high concrete walls for several miles. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel)

Gregory Yee

Los Angeles Times

(MCT)

Firefighters spent nearly two hours trying to rescue a woman, her dog and a man from the rain-swollen Los Angeles River on Monday afternoon.

救援crews were called around 2:13 p.m. to the river’s Sepulveda Basin, where they saw a woman in the water with her dog, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. Firefighters began rescue operations with the water moving at an estimated 5 to 10 mph.

Crews used a rope system to lower a firefighter to the woman and her dog, firefighters said. They got a rescue ring to the woman, but she abandoned the device as she tried to keep hold of her dog.

Firefighters were eventually able to lower a rescuer from a helicopter who secured the woman, authorities said. Crews also tracked her dog about 200 feet downriver and continued efforts to save the frightened canine.

The dog, however, fought a rescuer and broke loose, firefighters said.

At one point, a man jumped into the water to try to save the dog, and crews had to launch a second human rescue operation, firefighters said.

The man grabbed on to a rope that other bystanders had lowered into the river, authorities said. He was eventually secured by firefighters, who warned bystanders to stay out of the river.

Crews were able to secure the dog shortly after 4 p.m., firefighters said.

The man who jumped into the water to try to save the dog was transported to a hospital with bite wounds, firefighters said. The woman didn’t require medical transport.

It was not clear how the woman and her dog initially ended up in the river.

This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

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