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Patlan, who saved the one teen, is white and Hispanic and took swimming lessons as a kid. Parental fear and lack of parental encouragement were the top two reasons children and parents gave for not swimming, Anderson said, adding that fear trumped any financial limitations in the study. "Adults seem to pass their fear of water onto their children," she said. "There seems to be a culture that says,
'Its a scary environment don't go there.'" Marilyn Robinson, a friend of the families, was among the adults who could only watch the victims go under. "None of us could swim," Robinson told The Shreveport Times. "They were yelling
'Help me, help me! Somebody please help me!' It was nothing I could do but watch them drown one by one." Korey Prest said he tried in vain to save one of the victims. "He slipped out of my hands. I couldn't feel him no more," he said. After a more than two-hour search, divers discovered the teens' bodies at nightfall, in a muddy 30-foot-deep section of the river about 20 feet from where they disappeared. The murky water hindered the divers, who sectioned off the river as they meticulously searched the bottom. At their Shreveport neighborhood on Tuesday, family and friends gathered to offer condolences, hugging one another and holding an impromptu prayer vigil. "These are some of the greatest kids in the world," said the Rev. Emmitt Welch, who knew all the victims in his work as a Baptist youth minister. "I mean when you think about the ideal children, these kids are wonderful." Nearby, DeKendrix leaned against a pole, the lone survivor plucking nervously at his purple T-shirt, and sighed.
[Associated
Press;
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