The ground just swallowed
him up.
A Florida man fell into a
sinkhole that opened suddenly Thursday night beneath the bedroom of his
suburban Tampa home, calling out to his brother for help as he fell, the
brother said Friday.
"I ran toward my
brother's bedroom because I heard my brother scream," Jeremy Bush told
CNN's "AC360."
"Everything was gone.
My brother's bed, my brother's dresser, my brother's TV. My brother was
gone."
Bush frantically tried to
rescue his brother, Jeff Bush, by standing in the hole and digging at the
rubble with a shovel until police arrived and pulled him out, saying the floor
was still collapsing.
"I couldn't get him
out. I tried so hard. I tried everything I could," he said through tears.
"I could swear I heard him calling out."
Jeremy Bush and four other
people, including a 2-year-old child, escaped from the blue, one-story
1970s-era home in Seffner, a Tampa suburb.
What began with hopes of
rescue turned into a body recovery operation after monitoring equipment failed
to detect any signs that Jeff Bush survived the fall into the hole, according
the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office.
Rescuers still hadn't gone
into the hole -- it's too dangerous, Fire Chief Ron Rogers told reporters.
Authorities say they worry the hole is still spreading and the house could
collapse at any time.
"Until we know where
it's safe to bring the equipment, we really are just handicapped and paralyzed,
and can't really do a whole lot more than sit and wait. It's a tough situation.
It's even tougher for the family," Rogers said.
The sinkhole is about 20
feet to 30 feet across and may be 30 feet deep, said Bill Bracken, president of
an engineering company assisting emergency workers. The hole was originally
reported to be 100 feet across, but that is the diameter of the safety zone
surrounding it, Bracken said.
"It started in the
bedroom, and it has been expanding outward and it's taking the house with it as
it opens up," he said.
As the sinkhole continued to
deepen, nearby homes were evacuated as a precaution.
On Friday, the Hillsborough
County Sheriff's Office released a 911 call from the night before.
"The house just fell
through," a female voice says on the recording. She asks for an ambulance
and the police.
"The bedroom floor just
collapsed, and my brother-in-law is in there. He's underneath the house,"
she says.
Jessica Damico, Hillsborough
County Fire Department spokeswoman, said about 40 police and firefighters were
standing by at the scene Friday morning. Meanwhile, engineers hoped to use more
sophisticated equipment to get a three-dimensional image of the sinkhole.
Family members were also on
hand, waiting out what they feared would be a devastating day.
"I'm praying that
there's an air pocket in there ... but I can't see nobody surviving that long in
a hole like that. There was too much dirt, too much stuff," Jeremy Bush
said. "He was my brother, man, I loved him."
Sinkholes are common in
Florida, according to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. The
state lies on bedrock made of limestone or other carbonate rock that can be
eaten away by acidic groundwater, forming voids that collapse when the rock can
no longer support the weight of what's above it.
Hillsborough County is part
of an area known as "sinkhole alley" that accounts for two-thirds of
the sinkhole-related insurance claims in the state, according to a Florida
state Senate Insurance and Banking Committee report.
But Mike Merrill, county
administrator for Hillsborough County, stressed Friday that the sinkhole in
question was not "your typical sinkhole."
"They still have not
been able to find the boundaries of the underground chasm. For that reason,
we're being very deliberate, he said. "We're very frustrated. But we're
pursuing it as quickly as we can, as safely as we can."
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