Los Angeles Times

River takes lives of two teenage friends

Boys’ drownings point to danger even amid drought

- By Brittny Mejia and Kate Mather

The two families gathered in a cramped apartment in Highland Park, sharing stories and tears about two boys whose bodies were pulled from a river that, even in drought, never stops running.

Gustavo Ramirez, 15, and Carlos Daniel Jovel, 16, were best friends, Carlos’ mother, Reina Ardon, said Monday from inside her home, where the walls are lined with photos of her smiling son, the youngest of her two children.

Police said the pair may have ended up in the Los Angeles River after one fell in and his friend tried to save him, Los Angeles Police Sgt. Frank Preciado said Monday, based on accounts from two other teenagers who were with them at the time.

The teenagers told police they were hanging out Friday evening along the river behind their school — the Sotomayor Learning Academies complex — when Gus- tavo fell in the water, Preciado said. Carlos jumped in after him, he said, but neither surfaced.

The two friends “panicked,” Preciado said.

One called 911 and said someone was in the river, Preciado said. But the teens didn’t stay, he said. When the 911 operator tried to call back for more informatio­n, the phone was off.

Three helicopter­s — two from the Fire Department and one from the LAPD — f lew over the river and the area behind the school, Preciado said, but didn’t see anything.

The same night, the teenagers’ families went to police to report the two missing, worried because neither had returned home. At the time, the detectives did not connect the missing boys to those reported in the river, Preciado said.

Los Angeles experience­d a remarkably dry winter, extending a severe drought that has lasted four years. But even during dry periods, the river still f lows.

It runs at a somewhat steady f low year- round, fed by a continuous supply of water from the Donald C. Tillman Water Reclamatio­n Plant in the Sepulveda Basin, which dumps 23 million gallons of reclaimed water a day into the river.

In 2006, a 14- year- old boy fell into the river while f ishing with his friends in Glassell Park and drowned, according to a Los Angeles Department of Water and Power newsletter at the time.

One of the teens dropped his pole into the water and as the 14- year- old tried to get it, he fell into the water and disappeare­d. His body was found submerged downriver two hours after the incident was reported.

Carlos had told his parents Friday that he was going to play basketball near the school with a group of friends, including Gustavo, his mother said. The 16- yearold knew he needed to be home by 4 p. m. to pack for a weekend camping trip with his father.

“It shocked me when the time passed and he wasn’t home yet,” said Juan Carlos Jovel. “He was so excited.”

The two planned to leave at 6 p. m., but Carlos never returned. The family searched for the teenagers, optimistic, even as days passed, that they would f ind them, said Ardon, Carlos’ mother.

“We never lost hope. I never lost hope,” Ardon said, as she began to cry, putting a hand over her face. “But I was so scared.”

On Sunday morning, Preciado said, the two teenagers who had been with Jovel and Ramirez told their parents that their friends had fallen into the water. After the parents called police, Preciado said, detectives spoke to the two teenagers, who directed them to the “very specific area” where Gustavo and Carlos were last seen.

The soil under the mosscovere­d concrete bank had eroded, leaving a hollow area and a stream of water about 12 feet deep, Preciado said.

On Sunday, a sonarequip­ped boat was launched to scan the area and detected a few spots for a dive team to examine further. As the sonar equipment was pulled from the water, Preciado said, a cable caught one of the bodies.

Divers found the second body about 45 minutes later.

“I had the hope we’d f ind them alive,” Macario Ramirez, Gustavo’s father, said Monday, as he clutched a tissue in his right hand, sitting at a table in the apartment with his 19- year- old daughter and Carlos’ parents. He began to cry.

“I had the hope until the last minute that it wasn’t them,” Gustavo’s mother, Antonia Ramirez, said. “That the ones they took out of the river weren’t them.”

Throughout Monday morning, loved ones descended on the apartment, offering condolence­s and a warm embrace to each set of parents. Both boys had been happy and entertaini­ng, always joking around with their parents, siblings and with each other, the families said.

When Carlos would tell his mother a joke, it would make her laugh so much she would have him tell it repeatedly, Ardon said.

“Mom, I’m not a recorder,” he would say. Ardon smiled as she recalled what her son — known to his family as Titos — would tell her.

“He was the kind of person that you didn’t have to try and you were laughing,” his 18- year- old sister Sandra Jovel said.

Gustavo was known as Smiley to his soccer teammates because of the smile he always had on his face. And the only trouble Gustavo would get into in school would be for “interrupti­ng class with his laughter,” his mother said.

He always made his two older sisters laugh, Antonia Ramirez said, nodding toward her 19- year- old daughter Griselda Ramirez, who began to cry. Gustavo had told Griselda Ramirez on Friday that he was going to play basketball and she told him not to be home later than 6 p. m.

“He just said bye and he left,” she said tearfully. “He never came back.”

 ?? Photog r aphs by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? LAPD SGT. Frank Preciado near where the bodies of Gustavo Ramirez, 15, and Carlos Daniel Jovel, 16, were found. Gustavo fell in the water and Carlos jumped in after him, witnesses reported, but neither surfaced.
Photog r aphs by Al Seib Los Angeles Times LAPD SGT. Frank Preciado near where the bodies of Gustavo Ramirez, 15, and Carlos Daniel Jovel, 16, were found. Gustavo fell in the water and Carlos jumped in after him, witnesses reported, but neither surfaced.
 ??  ?? THE TEENAGERS from Los Angeles went missing Friday. Their bodies were recovered Sunday.
THE TEENAGERS from Los Angeles went missing Friday. Their bodies were recovered Sunday.
 ?? Photog r aphs by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THEIR FAMILIES say both boys had been happy, always joking around with their parents, siblings and each other. Above, Police Sgt. Frank Preciado, left, and LAPD Public Relations Officer Pedro M. Muniz stand near a memorial candle placed at the L. A. River bank.
Photog r aphs by Al Seib Los Angeles Times THEIR FAMILIES say both boys had been happy, always joking around with their parents, siblings and each other. Above, Police Sgt. Frank Preciado, left, and LAPD Public Relations Officer Pedro M. Muniz stand near a memorial candle placed at the L. A. River bank.
 ??  ?? FLOWERS ARE LEFT at the front gate to a school close to where the teenage friends were playing.
FLOWERS ARE LEFT at the front gate to a school close to where the teenage friends were playing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States