Los Angeles Times

Second body found in Ontario wash after storm

Floodwater­s swept away about 10 people last week, with several missing, officials say.

- By Summer Lin Times staff writer Gregory Yee contribute­d to this report.

A second person has been found in a wash in Ontario after about 10 people were swept away by f loodwaters during last week’s record-breaking storm.

The body was spotted Monday about 9:40 a.m. in the southern part of the basin near East Philadelph­ia Street and South Baker Avenue, said Ontario Fire Chief Ray Gayk, who didn’t have any informatio­n Monday regarding the person’s age, sex, identity or cause of death.

The person’s identity was not available Monday night and will be released after the San Bernardino County coroner’s investigat­ion and notificati­on of next of kin, said Dan Bell, Ontario’s communicat­ions and community relations director.

The Ontario Police Department responded about 9:46 a.m. Nov. 8 to a drowning report at a drainage basin at East Philadelph­ia Street and South Baker Avenue.

A man, identified by the coroner as Anthony Ray Lopez Sr., 63, of Ontario, was found in the basin and pronounced dead at the scene about 12:04 p.m.

About 10 people were swept away in the 1200 block of East 4th Street, according to the Ontario Fire Department.

Five people have been rescued and at least two missing-person reports have been filed with the Ontario Police Department. A third missing-person report was filed in which the person was last seen near the storm drain at the same time the group was swept away by the floodwater­s, but officials don’t yet know if the incident is related.

A fourth person might also be missing, based on eyewitness accounts.

The floodwater­s swept away a homeless encampment near John Galvin Park, set up along a wash that filters downstream into a retention basin near Philadelph­ia and Baker, fire officials said.

“As far as we know, there were homeless people in the storm drains and that’s when they got washed away by the surge of water and they ended up in the actual storm drain system,” Gayk said.

Authoritie­s planned to continue their “passive” search for the others swept away, Gayk said.

“We’re not going into the water unless we see something that we need to go into the water for,” he said. “The water is very shallow at this point and there’s a lot of debris coming out. It’s dangerous for crews to go in there and actively search at this point.”

Randy Tomes, 31, said that he has been homeless since he was 17 and that he previously stayed at the channel near John Galvin Park, where the people were swept away.

The area was usually dry, Tomes said. He had been sleeping near a carwash in the area when he awoke to police sirens during the storm.

“They’re all my friends,” Tomes said. “They got swept away.”

Miguel Batease, 26, said his sister-in-law Josephine Dominguez, 28, wasn’t homeless but had known some of the people who were living in the channel and went to speak with them last week during the storm. He said last week that their family hadn’t heard from her.

“She would go to where all the homeless people are to speak the word of God,” he said. “It’s very unfortunat­e. When Mother Nature comes, there’s no fighting it. It’s very sad.”

The Long Beach Fire Department also discovered a body near the Los Angeles River around 6:20 a.m. Monday, according to the Long Beach Police Department. The person’s identity hasn’t been released.

The Los Angeles County coroner was called to assist in the investigat­ion.

The storm, which originated in the Gulf of Alaska, pounded Southern California with powerful winds and drenched the region with more than an inch of rain in most spots — with mountain areas getting a couple of inches — and snow at higher elevations, according to the National Weather Service.

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