Texarkana Gazette

Search yields body of boy killed by wave

- By Mark Price

The body of 4-year-old Wesley Belisle was found Monday morning, five days after he was swept out to see by a reported “rogue wave.”

He was found at 7:40 a.m. on Carova Beach in Currituck County, after an intense search.

The Kitty Hawk Police said the boy’s disappeara­nce drew internatio­nal interest, in part because of the bizarre way in which he died.

His mother told police a wave knocked her and the boy to the ground and pulled them out to sea as they walked along the beach Tuesday.

“Rogue waves” were long considered nothing more than marine folklore, blamed for the disappeara­nce of ships and the sudden vanishing of people. But researcher­s such as Douglas Faulkner of the Naval Architectu­re and Ocean Engineerin­g have proven “rogue, freak and killer” waves are quite real and happen more frequently than previously believed.

Kitty Hawk Police and the U.S. Coast Guard have not specifical­ly used the term “rogue wave” in press releases about the boy’s disappeara­nce, but media outlets have reported authoritie­s blaming such a wave for the boy’s disappeara­nce.

The surf at Kitty Hawk that day was intense, with waves 4 to 6 feet high “crashing onto shore with ferocity,” reported the Washington Post.

The mother of the missing boy reported the two were walking in ankle deep water about 3 p.m. Tuesday when they were struck by a wave that knocked both to the ground. The boy was ripped from her grasp and quickly carried away, reported the Kitty Hawk Police Department.

She got up and scoured the water for her son as another wave rushed in, and then “lost sight of him in the surf,” U.S. Coast Guard officials told the Washington Post.

A surfer in the area told WVEC that the current was rougher than usual, and “a little kid didn’t stand a chance out there all alone.”

The family was vacationin­g on the Outer Banks from Manchester, New Hampshire, reported the New Hampshire Union Leader. The family had spent the previous days “collecting shells, digging holes in the sand, building sandcastle­s, and walking on the beach as a family with our dog,” the newspaper said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States