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Costa Rica Finds Body Of Kai Lamar, U.S. Student Missing At Sea

Missing Costa Rica Student

By MARIANELA JIMENEZ   05/ 6/11 11:59 PM ET   AP

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica -- Costa Rican rescuers on Friday found the body of a third U.S. high school student who was swept out to sea while taking a beach break during a religious mission.

A coast guard patrol recovered the body of Kai Lamar in waters off Bejuco beach on the Pacific coast, said Jesus Escalona, Red Cross assistant director of operations. The bodies of the other two students, Caity Jones and James Smith, were found earlier this week.

A strong undertow pulled the three away from shore Wednesday afternoon, according to a statement from their school, Patriot Preparatory Academy in Columbus, Ohio. They were among eight juniors and seniors on a trip not sponsored by the school.

Escalona said the body was found in roughly the same area where Smith's body was recovered a day earlier. He said the body fit Lamar's description and rescuers called off the search.

The bodies were taken to a morgue where relatives or U.S. Embassy officials can claim them. The U.S. Embassy has declined to comment, citing privacy restrictions.

Wednesday, the day before they were to return to Ohio, was a free day, and students were given a choice of whether they wanted to ride horses near a waterfall or go to the beach, the brother of one of the students told an Ohio television station.

"Unfortunately, it was just a fatal mistake," Smith's brother Nick Smith told WCMH-TV in Columbus.

He said the trip was the first mission for his brother and that he had worked to raise every penny needed to pay for the trip.

"That kid was more driven to do things for God than I've seen anybody at his age ever. ... He was doing things and so committed that honestly, in 16 years, he finished everything he needed to do in this life," Smith told the station.

A message seeking comment was left by The Associated Press on Friday at a phone listing for Smith's parents.

Shari Lamar, Kai Lamar's mother, said that while her family was saddened by her son's death, they found some comfort in knowing he had taken advantage of an opportunity "to show his love for the Lord and to do what he thought he was called to do."

"He and his friends had the time of their life doing the work," she said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "It just brought them great joy. They were phenomenal kids. ... It's sad, but we just trust God."

The three students swept away, all juniors, were described as active in school and the community, well-liked and good students.

The mission was organized by Ohio-based Impulse International Mission Trips, where a spokeswoman said no one could comment Friday. The students visited an orphanage, a drug rehabilitation center and some villagers, according to a post by Lamar on a blog the group was keeping on the trip. The group also played soccer, colored and read with youngsters at a community center and did some painting at a Salvation Army church.

The K-12 school, on the city's east side, is a former private Christian school that converted this year to a charter school, meaning it is publicly funded but privately run. It has about 500 students.

Students had made the same volunteer trip to Costa Rica in the past when the school was private, said Paul Blythe, a friend of the Jones family and a school board member whose children graduated from the school. They raised funds and obtained sponsors to pay for the trip, he said.

In 2006, three Kansas students and their teacher drowned in Costa Rica while on a Spanish language immersion trip. A group of students were swimming and some were swept away by strong currents. At least two were rescued, but the teacher and one of the students died trying to save the others.

"These beaches are some of the most dangerous beaches in the world," said David Angueira, a Boston attorney who brought a wrongful death lawsuit against a tour operator over the 2006 deaths. "These beaches are unbelievably dangerous, rip currents like you wouldn't believe. And our kids just keep drowning."

At least 52 people have drowned at sea in Costa Rica this year, said Freddy Roman, another Red Cross spokesman. While that appears to mark an increase from the 2010 full-year total of 76, Roman said he did not think it was a trend, noting last year's number was far below the usual. There were 103 drownings registered in 2009 and 128 in 2008.

Emergency officials have attributed the drop last year to an overall decrease in vacationers caused by an economic downturn.

Jim Batres, assistant director for rescues and operations for the Red Cross of Costa Rica, said the Red Cross is the only agency that offers lifeguard service at Costa Rican beaches, but doesn't have a big enough budget to cover all the beaches full time.

Batres said there are only about 60 volunteer lifeguards for all the country's beaches. Some hotels hire their own lifeguards, and there are signs on many beaches warning about hazards.

___

Associated Press reporter Doug Whiteman in Columbus, Ohio, contributed to this report.

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04:57 PM on 05/09/2011
i was good friends with Kai when he and his family lived in Trumbull, CT. He was a very good friend and we were in many classes together through out middle school. his family is in my prayers and he will be missed
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02:12 AM on 05/08/2011
I got stuck in a rip tide in a rowboat one time when I was 12-13 and had no idea what it was. I was rowing in one direction and moving backwards in another. I had to crab my way sideways to the shore and pull the boat some in shallow water till it passed.

My stepdad (who was a tugboat captain at one time) taught us kids to go with the current if we get stuck and swim parallel to the shore and the tide would usually bring us back in. (underwater sandbars, rocks, etc.)

Some beaches are just to dangerous though.........(extremely cold water, or multiple currents etc.)
I always study a beach before going in.

My condolences to the families of these students.
09:25 PM on 05/07/2011
Our condolences to the parents of the kids that perished in Costa Rica - just because of this danger and that so many tourists succumb to rip tides we published earlier this year a compilation on What to Watch Out For and Survival Tips for rip tides and undertows. So very sad.

Tee

Tee is the founder and senior editor of Costa Rica Travel Magazine www.CostaRicaCLOSEUP.com and Video Magazine www.CostaRicaCloseup.TV guides to Costa Rica
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
09:13 PM on 05/07/2011
Undertows are invisible and treacherous, found in fresh water as well as salt. Lake Erie undertows take lives every year. Nothing to ignore. Before going to a beach, you should educate yourself on what to do if caught in one.
07:53 PM on 05/07/2011
A shame for sure, yet it happens all the time. Water is wonderful, and, like all of mother nature forces it has to be respected and we have to be taught how to cope with them. It is a given youth feel invincible and it is hard to bring realism to their conscientousness. Most of the posts I read were good; one bothered me though, it is not enough not to panic, a person must know what to do. For sure panic is trouble, and in this case just being a strong swimmer is not enough and anyone who says it is, is wrong.
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02:08 AM on 05/08/2011
Panic is usually the first and most important obstacle to overcome and survive.
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emmasdolly
07:24 PM on 05/07/2011
Strong ocean current is something that needs to be explained before it is experienced. I was in Cancun, Mexico, which is on the Yucatan Penninsula, meaning it sticks out into the ocean. It was a warm, breezy day, the water was clear and beautiful, but there were warning signs on the beach. This was the beach at our hotel, which also had a huge pool, with good reason. You didn't have to go out very far in that water to, up to your knees maybe, to see that you could easily be swept away.
techjockey
Keeping My Gratitude Higher Than My Expectations..
07:17 PM on 05/07/2011
I know exactly what part of Costa Rica this happened in....
Those beaches are really rough. The locals will tell you to watch what the surfers do. If they do not go in the water, you should not even consider it.
Being, at one time many years ago, an olympic level swimmer I spent my time down there avidly watching my much less skilled family members frolicking in the rough sea, expecting to rescue at any moment.
My teeth hurt for a week afterwards after gritting them so hard.
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oxjr
05:49 PM on 05/07/2011
If caught in a rip current remain calm. swim with it or parallel to it until it reaches its weakest point. You can not swim against it as it is like a stationary pool - you will stay in one place till you are exhausted. An under tow is the same thing - let it take you and go with it till you feel a break in its power.
masontn
conservative and proud of it
04:02 PM on 05/07/2011
You better give mommy back her computer. Tax dollars for CEOs? Are you refering to bailouts? There are many more companies than the ones that got bail outs. And I doubt that you pay any taxes. You school age liberals are a riot.
03:52 PM on 05/07/2011
Let'a face it! All charter schools are con jobs.
03:51 PM on 05/07/2011
This is like Lake Michigan, I would say that in the last 3 to 4 years young people have drowned because of under currents. I'm sure that this comming summer there will be even more. These kids either don't know how to read signs and also don't know how to swim very well. Of all the time I spent at or on Lake Michigan in the 50's, 60's and 70's I don't remember anyone drownding in Lake Michigan.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
03:42 PM on 05/07/2011
Humans are natural swimmers. All of my children were good swimmers before they could even walk. Take your kids to the water early so that they don't lose their natural instinct because the only thing that will drown you in salt water is panic.
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looneydoone
not a "cookie"
03:56 PM on 05/07/2011
I can't count the number of panicked kids I've pulled from the shallow water. They'd gotten a boogie board, but never a swim lesson before coming for a day at the beach.
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
04:14 PM on 05/07/2011
We used to call boogie boards "speed bumps", but surfers can be very territorial.
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qud
03:03 PM on 05/07/2011
Very sad. My heartfealt prayers to the family and friends. Unfortunately you read about this sort of situation all over the world where people vacation at the coast in areas, are not familiar with tides and rip currents and don't know how dangerous they can actually be. Look south to Mexico, also to Australia, South Africa. Read their news articles during their peak seasons and the sad truth is this is, and has been happening all the time.

May he rest in peace and may his good work always be remembered.
03:03 PM on 05/07/2011
I wonder if anyone over there has heard of a great new invention...It's called a warning sign. Then again, it DOES have a tendency to allow people to meet their maker of choice alot earlier. Too bad most Taliban don't swim, eh? Hey, that could be a good thing. Think tsunami and long robes and heavy dynamite. And, do you know what tune OBL is singing now? "Allah me...."
01:56 PM on 05/07/2011
CHURCH goers who want to do good skip third worlds and go to the ghettos in USA
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drjasonmd
Shalom, compa!
03:31 PM on 05/07/2011
There are plenty of churches in the ghettos. Maybe people should be free to do what they want to instead of what you tell them to.
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04:16 PM on 05/07/2011
Which is exactly what the churches do in other countries. Why not leave the alone and quit telling them what to believe? Whatever they believe has just as much value as whatever the church does. More, in my book, if they don't go around telling peole what to believe. If you want to help people with clean water, schools, etc. fine. Leave the damnable preaching out of it.