The New Zealand Herald

Hero cop rescues three girls at lake

‘It's just what you do . . . humans need to help each other out’

- Anna Leask

When off-duty police officer Wayne Churchouse locked eyes with the petrified child in the water he knew instantly something terrible was happening.

He was paddle-boarding near Rotorua on Sunday when he chanced upon three little girls he initially thought were playing.

“As I came up the oldest one looked me straight in the eye with absolute fear in her eyes, then she screamed out ‘help',” he said.

The Senior Constable and youth aid officer from Dannevirke was off Boyes Beach on the shore of Lake Okareka.

He noticed the girls as he returned from deep water to the edge of the area where people were swimming.

“The youngest was about 7 and the oldest about 9. I thought they were just playing, they were bobbing up and down and the youngest was climbing on to the oldest.” Churchouse didn't hesitate — he

dived off his board and plucked the girls from the water.

All three had gone under by the time he got to them.

“I had to reach down under the water and bring them back up,” he explained.

Churchouse helped the trio to shore and made sure they were okay.

“They were coughing and

splutterin­g but they were talking, they were all good,” he said.

Once they had caught their breath the girls ran off into the crowd on the beach — assuredly to find their family.

Churchouse said the beach was packed and he did not see who the girls were with.

He said the water immediatel­y off the beach was shallow, but the lakebed dropped quickly at a certain point. He found the girls just past it.

“There were people all around them, the closest was about 5 metres away but no one else noticed,” he said. “They were very lucky.”

Churchouse shunned talk of bravery or heroics.

“I’m not that much of a hero — it wasn’t that much of a drama. I’m just a good Samaritan, it’s just what you do — you get in there, humans need to help each other out.”

Manawatu Area Commander Inspector Ross Grantham said it was Churchouse’s fourth water rescue, and all were when he was off-duty.

“Wayne epitomises the police core values although it’s not just about being a police officer, he’s a great member of the community and a great father, looking out for his children as well as others.

“He’s very humble and says he was just in the right place at the right time, encouragin­g everyone look after each other and be vigilant around the water. How great would our communitie­s be if everyone looked out for each other this way?”

One of Churchouse’s rescues involved his own son. The pair were swimming near Maketu a few years back when trouble struck.

“He was about 10 at the time,” Churchouse said. “There was a quite a big lady being supported in the water by her partner, they floated down and then she got swept away from him.

“She was trying to grab anything she could find — and she found my son. She was panicking, she tried to climb on top of him.”

Churchouse swam out to help and faced a dilemma — who to save?

“I was thinking, do I save my son or help her?” he recalled.

“My son could swim so I made sure he was on his way back safely and then I took her in.”

The policeman also made headlines in 2014 when he rescued a teenage boy from a cave.

He urged anyone near the water this summer to keep an eye out for others in distress.

“I’m a police officer so it’s my profession to be vigilant and observant,” he said.

“There were hundreds of people on that beach and not one of them noticed the girls. They had no idea what was going on.

“There were lots of kids out there screaming and playing. They could have been just another kid, but they weren’t.

“My message is for everyone to be extra-vigilant, keep an eye on each other, especially young children, even if they can swim, because it’s the people who can’t who try and climb on to them.”

Water Safety New Zealand chief executive Jonty Mills said drowning was the top cause of recreation­al death and the third cause of accidental death in New Zealand, with 92 preventabl­e fatalities in 2017.

“It’s our hope every family makes water safety a priority this summer.

“The only foolproof solution is constant active adult supervisio­n and keeping toddlers at arm’s length at all times around water.”

 ?? Photo (left) / Christine McKay ?? Dannevirke’s Senior Constable Wayne Churchouse (left) knew something terrible was happening at Lake Okareka, where he’s pictured in black shorts on the day of the rescue.
Photo (left) / Christine McKay Dannevirke’s Senior Constable Wayne Churchouse (left) knew something terrible was happening at Lake Okareka, where he’s pictured in black shorts on the day of the rescue.
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