SWBP News

Drowning Deaths of Two Navy SEALs Were Due to Shallow Water Blackout

Special Warfare Operator 1st Class Brett Allen Marihugh, 34, of Livonia died April 24,2015.  A group of trainees found him and Special Warfare Operator 1st Class Seth Cody Lewis of Queens, New York, at the bottom of a combat training pool. Lewi…

Special Warfare Operator 1st Class Brett Allen Marihugh, 34, of Livonia died April 24,2015.  A group of trainees found him and Special Warfare Operator 1st Class Seth Cody Lewis of Queens, New York, at the bottom of a combat training pool. Lewis also died.

The Detroit News has obtained a copy of the results of the Navy's formal investigation of the drownings of two Navy SEAL's at a naval training facility in Virginia this past April.

Please view their informative article about the results of the investigation here

Highlights include:

- Cause of deaths have been ruled as shallow water blackout

- The Navy will now require a lifeguard or first-class swimmer to be present on deck at Naval Special Warfare pools for all conditioning swims other than laps. 

- Signs will be posted in pool facilities expressly prohibiting breath-holding.

- Rear Admiral B.L. Losey, commander of the Naval Special Warfare Command, has ordered a review of all training requiring breath-holding for compliance with safety standards, and for inspections at pool facilities to ensure the proper posting of emergency-response plans and equipment.

- Technically they were abiding by the "two man rule" so their deaths were not due to misconduct, as ruled by the Navy.

“Our commitment to be the best and push ourselves to ever higher levels of proficiency must be tempered by safety compliance that is often learned from a past tragedy like this one,” Rear Admiral B.L. Losey, commander of the Naval Special Warfare Command, wrote in an Aug. 14 letter accompanying the investigation. “Overconfidence is an ever-present risk factor.”

Our deepest condolences to the families of these true American heroes.  

Proposed Regulation for Pool Signage in NYC

The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has published a draft regulation that would require all swimming pool operators in NYC to post a sign with a specific image alerting swimmers that underwater breath-holding is dangerous and prohibited.

The department is accepting comments on the proposed regulation
until November 24, 2015, and welcomes our input.

Please click on the link below to comment on the proposed
regulation and show YOUR support.
Lives will be saved!

http://rules.cityofnewyork.us/content/posting-regulations-vendors-alcoholic-beverages-chapter-1-requirement-breath-holding-warning

View more details about the proposed regulation here.

Crossfit Promotes DEADLY Training Exercise: Hyperventilation and underwater breathe-holding drills can lead to DEATH WITHOUT WARNING

Crossfit Promotes DEADLY Training Exercise: Hyperventilation and underwater breathe-holding drills can lead to DEATH WITHOUT WARNING

This type of training is VERY dangerous and can lead to sudden underwater blackout WITH NO WARNING.  If an athlete participates in this type of training without proper precautions and extreme safety measures in place, they could very easily lose their life.

A Father Tells the Heartbreaking Story of Losing His 15 Year Old Son to SWB

  Reiss Morgan

As told by Mark Morgan of Brentwood, Essex, UK , proud father of Reiss Morgan, age 15. 

Reiss was a very active sporty child like many boys his age. He played tennis, football, was a keen coarse fisher and a very competent swimmer. He regularly swam at the tennis club, and I had no fear at all of Reiss in water.  He was always in the water and had a love for it (yeah I know a lot of people say that) but he loved the sea,  wildlife, fishing and all.

On  the night of July 30, 2009, Reiss and I had been shopping for his mother's birthday present (next day) and at the last minute we had a change of plans. Reiss was in the Air Cadets and was due to go that evening, but instead he phoned his mum to ask if he could come with me to the club for a swim. We went home and Reiss put his mother's present and card under his bed and got his swimming gear. At the club I went for a workout upstairs and Reiss went to the pool. I came down from the gym to simply check on him at about 7:15pm and he saw me and waved through the viewing window (he was talking to the female assistant.) About 15 minutes passed and as I came down into the viewing area the alarms were going and I could see they were trying to resuscitate my son poolside.

A doctor was at the club at the time but he couldn't bring Reiss back.

Unbelievably there were a few adults in the pool at the time of Reiss' drowning. At the inquest it came out that Reiss said to one of them "Do you know how long I can hold my breath for?" to which the man's reply was "I don't care. " Also, Reiss had been seen hyperventilating.

When we buried Reiss we chose to put him near his school where you can hear the children playing during the daytime.