
Florida child starts drowning in pool while adult who was with him stands beside it
A six-year-old started drowning in a pool in Florida while the adult with him stood by until the boy was saved by a passing stranger.
Surveillance footage caught the grueling minutes that Oscar struggled in the water of a pool in Fort Lauderdale while his cousin frantically called out for help.
It wasn't until Roque Ivan Ocampo, who was passing by, heard the screams and ran to help that Oscar was rescued from the bottom of the pool.
'He doesn't move at all, that's why I thought maybe, "He's dead," because he wasn't moving,' he told NBC News.
The boy had fallen into the pool after losing his balance on a pool float. He remained under water for nearly two minutes while his cousin paced around the edge of the water.
'There was no time to think, just to act,' Ocampo told ABC News.
The footage showed Ocampo quickly take his shoes off and jump into the water.
He pulled Oscar to the surface with the help of a bystander and began an attempt to resuscitate the child.
Passerby Ivan Ocampo heard the cries of Oscar's cousin as the boy struggled in the water and dove into the pool to rescue him
'I started doing CPR. The kid wasn't breathing, but I keep doing it and doing it until he started breathing again,' Ocampo said.
Oscar's family begun rushing over to the boy and called 911.
Bodycam footage showed that arriving officers took over and could be heard asking if Oscar could squeeze their hand.
The boy was rushed to hospital, but is expected to make a full recovery.
'It takes a lot of bravery to do what he did, and I think Oscar's outcome would've been a lot worse if [he] hadn't he jumped in the pool, pulled him out and done CPR right away,' said Jamie Bodine, a Fort Lauderdale Police Officer who responded to the scene.
'I don't think we thanked him enough that day,' Bodine said.
The boy and Ocampo reunited the next day, he told Oscar: 'You're very strong and I'm so proud of you.'
'It was so special, to be honest, wonderful moment for me,' Ocampo said. 'This is the best gift I ever had.'
'I'm glad I was in the right moment to save the kid,' he added.
The incident stirred the internet as people slammed the boy's cousin for standing by and for his family to leave the pair alone.
'Where were the parents? Why were children left alone near pool without adult supervision? Are parents being charged with neglect? Something is wrong with this scenario,' one commenter said.
'Wow, what are two kids that don't know how to swim doing anywhere near a pool. Not a single ounce of common sense with the parents. Absolute horrible parenting,' another wrote.
One said: 'What a hero That's a real lifeguard! For that 'cousin' why do you have a pool when you can't swim? Why are you even standing there? You have a stick throw it away & scream Use it!'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
‘Explosion' rocks Las Vegas Strip outside Aria Casino leaving palm tree on fire as witness claims ‘car fled scene'
AN EXPLOSION has been reported on the Las Vegas Strip outside the Aria Resort and Casino. Smoke could be seen filling the air as emergency services attempted to extinguish the fire. 2 A car was reportedly seen fleeing the area, but it is unclear if it is connected to the blast. Sharing a video of the scene on X, one witness said: "Bomb went off in Vegas. Or a large explosion. Harmon and the strip by Aria." Another witness, posting a video on TikTok, wrote: "There was a boom and then the tree was on fire." The explosion reported near the location of a shooting that took place several days ago. YouTuber Finny Da Legend is believed to have been of the victims killed. Police have not yet commented on the explosion or its cause. No injuries have been reported.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Two Idaho students who discovered murder victims bloodbath describe the horrific experience
The Idaho students who discovered the bloodbath inside the off-campus home in Moscow have broken their silence, two months before their friends' accused killer Bryan Kohberger goes on trial. Emily Alandt and Hunter Johnson had been called over to the house on the morning of November 13, 2022, by the two surviving roommates who were unable to reach their friends and were scared something bad had taken place. Once inside, they found Xana Kernodle 's body. A chilling 911 call was placed, with officers arriving on the scene to find all four victims dead. Alandt and Johnson are now speaking out for the very first time about the day that their friends were brutally murdered in Prime Video's upcoming four-part docuseries 'One Night in Idaho: The College Murders.' In the newly-released trailer, the students speak about the moment they made the heartbreaking discovery - and the chilling realization that their group of friends could have been 'stalked' for months. 'We were a big group of friends, why would you target those four,' Alandt is heard saying. 'There's a big realization that we had been stalked for so many months - and had no clue.' In the early hours of November 13, 2022, Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Kernodle and Ethan Chapin were stabbed to death inside 1122 King Road in the college town. The three young women lived in the home with two roommates Bethany Funke and Dylan Mortensen, while Chapin was Kernodle's boyfriend. At around 4am that morning, Mortensen came face-to-face with the masked killer inside the home. She told investigators she had heard disturbing noises inside the home and, after opening her bedroom door, saw a man dressed in all black and a balaclava-type mask walking past her doorway toward the back sliding door. After the terrifying encounter, Mortensen desperately tried to call and text her roommates and friends. Only Funke responded. The two survivors repeatedly texted and called each other and their four friends. 'No one is answering,' Mortensen texted Funke, according to court records. 'What's going on?' she then sent to Goncalves. In another message, Mortensen texted Funke, 'I'm freaking out rn' and described the intruder wearing 'like ski mask almost.' Mortensen ended up running from her room on the second floor down to Funke's room on the first floor where they stayed until daylight. Cell phone records, released in court documents, show that the two women called and texted their roommates and other people, and accessed social media platforms over the next eight hours. With still no response from any of the four victims, at around 11.50am, Mortensen called Alandt and asked her to 'come over and check the house because she was scared,' court documents state. Alandt and her boyfriend Johnson came to the home and met Mortensen and Funke at the bottom floor of the three-story house. Johnson, Funke and Mortensen made their way to the second floor, with Johnson going to the kitchen to grab a kitchen knife, the documents say. At that moment, the students saw Kernodle lying on the floor. The students recall that horrifying moment in the trailer. 'I stepped foot in the house and immediately Hunter was like "get out," somebody call 911,' a female voice says. The panicked 911 call was then placed from Funke's cell phone. In the call, Alandt is heard speaking to the dispatcher, saying that they 'saw some man in their house last night.' The Prime Video series, which premieres on July 11, marks the first time that Alandt and Johnson have ever spoken out publicly about that horrific day. After going through the trauma of finding their friends dead, they reveal that they were then subjected to online rumors and threats. 'People were thinking we were murderers,' Hunter Johnson says in the trailer. 'We were getting death threats,' Alandt says. Another friend reveals that photos of his home were posted online, as he was accused of having 'something to do with it.' The series delves into the online 'rumors and speculation' that filled the void - with the surviving roommates and some of the victims' friends facing shocking accusations, online attacks and death threats - as no arrests were made and no suspects named for weeks after the murders. Chapin's triplet siblings Hunter and Maizie - who also attended University of Idaho - also speak out for the first time, with Hunter speaking about the terrifying aftermath of the murders where their brother's killer was still at large. 'There's this person out there who had just murdered our brother and he's still out there somewhere,' he recalls. The show also features new interviews with other friends and family members of the victims including Chapin's parents Stacey and Jim Chapin and Mogen's parents Karen and Scott Laramie. On December 30, 2022, an arrest was finally made in the case. Kohberger - a 30-year-old criminology PhD student over the border at Washington State University - was taken into custody at his parents' home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, where he had returned for the holidays. He was connected to the murders after his DNA was found on a Ka-Bar leather knife sheath found next to Mogen's body at the scene. Prosecutors also found cellphone records placing him outside the student home multiple times prior to the murders, as well as surveillance footage showing a vehicle matching his car speeding away. Now, more than two years on from his arrest, Kohberger's trial is scheduled to begin this August in Ada County. However, a critical hearing is set to take to take place Wednesday which could turn the trial timeline on its head. In an 11th-hour move, Kohberger's defense is asking the judge to delay the trial - citing a recent Dateline episode that revealed bombshell new details and pointed to a potential evidence leak in the case. In the show, released in early May, the suspected killer's phone records, porn choices and online searches for Ted Bundy were revealed for the first time. It also aired never-before-seen surveillance footage of a suspect vehicle fleeing the horrific crime scene on November 13, 2022. The defense asked for the trial to be postponed citing the Dateline episode and other media coverage about the case. Site: The home at 1122 King Road where the four students were murdered in a horror knife attack The defense also argued that they need more time to effectively prepare for trial and investigate Kohberger's 'life story' ahead of the potential penalty phase. Prosecutors fired back at the request in a court filing this week, furiously responding: 'It is time to try this case. Defendant was arrested in late December of 2022 and was indicted in May of 2023.' In its response, the state also rubbished claims a delay would make it easier to seat an impartial jury and blasted the defense for going down 'every rabbit hole.' 'Defendant's Motion amounts to a request for a perpetual continuance so that his counsel can go down every rabbit-hole until Defendant - rather than the Court - deems himself ready for trial,' the filing, from prosecutor Bill Thompson, reads. The state argues that Kohberger's team has had plenty of time to prepare for the trial - coming more than two years after his arrest. Judge Steven Hippler will weigh the arguments to delay the trial during a hearing on June 18. A closed-door hearing will also be held that day around whether or not the defense can present an alternate suspect to jurors at the trial. If the trial goes ahead as planned, jury selection will begin in late July or early August, with the trial getting underway August 11. If convicted, Kohberger faces the death penalty.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Ex-NFL star Antonio Brown hunted by cops for attempted murder after shots were fired during brawl
Miami-Dade County police are looking to arrest troubled ex-NFL star Antonio Brown on an attempted second-degree murder charge as a result of a shooting at a boxing event last month in Florida. If convicted, the Super Bowl winner could face up to 15 years in prison. The Florida warrant was signed by a judge on Wednesday and lists Brown being charged with attempted murder with a firearm and states the former wide receiver is to post $10,000 bond and remain under house arrest pending a trial, according to court files provided to A viral video from a celebrity boxing event in Miami last month showed Brown appearing to pull out a gun as he ran back towards a skirmish. Shots are then heard off camera as frightened onlookers flee the area. The 36-year-old was dragged to the floor by a man who, it later emerged, was a member of security trying to protect him. No victims emerged at the time, so Brown wasn't arrested. Instead when viral video of the incident surfaced online, Brown claimed he was the victim of an attempted robbery: 'Regarding the boxing event that happened last night. I was jumped by multiple individuals who tried to steal my jewelry and cause physical harm to me.' However, the other combatant told a different story last month. That man, Zul-Qarnaįn Nantambu, instead claimed the troubled former NFL star instigated the violent incident and personally fired the shots, possibly in response to a legal battle between the two in federal bankruptcy court. As seen in court files obtained by Daily Mail, Nantambu claimed during a 2022 encounter with Brown in Dubai that the Super Bowl winner stole a valuable pendant he had designed and produced. Nantambu further said Brown lied to police in the United Arab Emirates, accusing him of theft and resulting in Nantambu's brief imprisonment. Nantambu sued Brown in Florida in 2022 and ultimately won a $968,960 verdict that was later vacated in 2024 before the case was dismissed. However, Nantambu is now pursuing a partial reduced judgement of $123,600 in federal bankruptcy court as Brown has continued to deny his allegations, as seen those filings. So it came as a tremendous surprise to Nantambu in May when he noticed Brown had 'locked eyes' with him at the aforementioned Miami boxing event. Rather than discussing their dispute or ignoring his legal rival entirely, Brown immediately called over to security to falsely claim he was being jumped, Nantambu said. 'He plays gangster and plays the police at the same time, then he blames CTE,' Nantambu told Daily Mail, referencing Brown's frequent claims of traumatic brain injuries. As Nantambu told Daily Mail, he now wonders if the retired Pittsburgh Steelers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers star called security on him to create a false pretense for Friday's shooting. Document: According to the warrant, Brown punched Nantambu before the ex-NFL star ran for his gun 'I don't know if [Brown] premeditated a thought in his mind, like: "Okay, I'm gonna say that he tried to take my chain and I'm gonna kill him and I don't have to pay him his judgment,"' Nantambu told 'He thought he would get a free kill,' Nantambu said, referencing Florida's notorious 'Stand Your Ground' law that permits deadly force under certain heightened circumstances. One video, provided to Daily Mail by Nantambu, shows him fighting with a group of men before an individual matching Brown's description abruptly flees. Another viral video of the incident appears to show Brown returning to the melee with a gun in hand. 'He ran to get the gun. He shot at me. I think he grazed my neck. We started fighting for the gun,' Nantambu said. 'The adrenaline is going crazy. He ran into me. I threw him on the ground. A gun fell. We start scrambling for the gun on the ground.' It was at this point cops arrived, according to Nantambu. 'The police are screaming: "Who has the gun?"' Nantambu told 'Kids are screaming: "AB shooting! AB shooting!" He could have hit one of them kids.' He said he put his hands in the air as frantic cops began to pursue Brown, whom Nantambu said ran inside the venue, where he was apprehended. Despite the violent uproar, Miami police made no arrests and Brown wrote on X he's considering potential legal action against 'the individuals that jumped me.' Meanwhile, the police apparently ignored Nantambu, who claimed to walk away from the scene with one shoe 'like Cinderella' and blood dripping from a neck wound that could have been far worse. 'I'm feeling this burning sensation on my neck,' Nantambu told 'I thank God I'm not murdered. God spared me from getting shot in the face.' From there, Nantambu went to the hospital for the neck wound and a broken finger before flying to the Beltway the following morning for an event supporting Sudanese refugees. An outspoken supporter of Sudan and Palestine who also works in filmmaking, fashion and music, Nantambu made national headlines in February when he was among the protestors who stormed the field during halftime at Super Bowl LIX . But it was three years earlier, prior to a Floyd Mayweather Jr. exhibition in Dubai, that Nantambu said he first became involved with Brown. A proud Muslim already familiar to the area, Nantambu said he arrived in Dubai in May of 2022 to discover a shirtless Brown being 'disrespectful' to customs officials at the airport. 'He was cursing them out and all that,' Nantambu said. Nantambu was in Dubai hoping to convince Mayweather to help him promote a pendant necklace he was selling. And since Brown and Mayweather were known acquaintances, Nantambu used the bit of Arabic he speaks to help calm tensions at the airport: 'I intervened to try to quell it, because they weren't going to let him in the country.' Brown was, perhaps, at the height of his infamy at the time. It was only a few months earlier that he ended a sideline spat with Buccaneers coaches by removing his uniform and running off the field during a game, never to play in the NFL again. But despite Brown's well-reported personal and professional problems, Nantambu approached him as they waited for their baggage. The two began talking, and as Nantambu remembers, they ended up hanging out on a yacht with Mayweather prior to the fight. When fight night came around, Nantambu said, he agreed to let Brown wear the pendant with disastrous consequences. 'He basically tried to steal it,' Nantambu said. 'He moved hotel rooms, left the hotel, stopped answering calls. And then when I confronted him about the pendant, he acted like he lost it.' Nantambu said Brown gave him some of his own jewelry to hold as collateral, but later allegedly lied to police in Dubai, falsely claiming that the valuables were stolen from Brown by Nantambu. 'He told them that I stole $2million worth of jewelry from him,' said Nantambu, who has yet to get his pendant back from Brown. Nantambu was released approximately one month later after presenting evidence to a local prosecutor that proved Brown made false claims to police, according to the court filing obtained by Since then, Nantambu has waged a legal battle with Brown, who continues to go through bankruptcy proceedings despite boasting on a podcast in November he has 'the freedom that comes with having money.' However, according to Nantambu, mounting debt has forced Brown to sell his jewelry collection, which he's replaced with faux gems. 'Well, first off, I know that chain is fake that he's wearing,' Nantambu said of Brown. 'He pawned all his real jewelry, the jewelry that he used to have in Dubai, like the gold Cuban-link [necklace] and the Richard Mille [watch] and the gold medallion that said "A B" - he got rid of all that.'