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Local Mexican restaurant working to raise money for late employee

Local Mexican restaurant working to raise money for late employee

Yahoo12-05-2025

SULLIVAN'S ISLAND (WCBD) –After the tragic drowning at Breach Inlet, a local Mexican restaurant is working to raise money to send their employee's remains back to his family in Mexico. Customers at Agave and Azul Mexicano locations in the Lowcountry can contribute to the restaurant group's efforts to send one of their employee's back home for a funeral. 'The response has been amazing. The community has really come together and done their part,' said Carlos Anthony, the Manager at Agave's Cantina in Mount Pleasant.
Yoselin Lopez-Perez and Guillermo Quintero Camacho died hours apart after being pulled from the water at breach inlet last week. Guillermo was an employee at Azul Mexicano in downtown Charleston, and he often filled in at Agave's in Mount Pleasant.
'He left a good impression on the people, super nice guy, hardworking. We all have a relationship, we all connect,' said Anthony.
The restaurants are fundraising to send his remains back to his family in Mexico, which could cost up to 10 thousand dollars. Carlos says Guillermo's body will be transported Wednesday and they are getting close to their fundraising goal.
'We're very impressed how the community reached out to us they came together, and everybody got to know the situation. It's sad but people have been helping a lot,' said Anthony.
Breach Inlet is known for its deadly currents and while there is signage in the area, officials with the town of Sullivan's Island confirmed to news 2 they're in the process of adding more signage, including signage in Spanish to make sure the dangers are clear to everyone in area.
Isle of Palms says their warning sign is bilingual, but they will continue to have conversations about additional signs in the future.
You can donate to the GoFundMe here.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Low-head dams can be 'drowning machines.' Awareness and safety urged for summer outings
Low-head dams can be 'drowning machines.' Awareness and safety urged for summer outings

Indianapolis Star

time40 minutes ago

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Low-head dams can be 'drowning machines.' Awareness and safety urged for summer outings

Amanda Malott's son Andre "AJ" Edwards Jr. was 14 when he went down to play near the Silver Creek dam with some friends last year. A large billboard loomed over the creek where the boys were headed, encouraging southern Indiana locals to 'Check out New Albany's Silver Creek Landing.' It depicted several people standing above a small dam, and one figure dangling their legs over the edge. The waterway empties into the Ohio River just less than a mile from Silver Creek Landing and was one of AJ's favorite spots to play outside, Malott said. Less than an hour after AJ left home, two police officers were knocking on Malott's door. They told her AJ hadn't resurfaced after jumping off the low-head dam into Silver Creek, which divides New Albany and Clarksville. First responders and volunteers found AJ's body after a lengthy search into the night. AJ's story is part of a growing number of tragic incidents involving low-head dams across Indiana and the United States. 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AJ's sister has set up a GoFundMe to support the family. Thousands of low-head dams were built across the U.S. in the 19th and 20th centuries. They typically aren't higher than 15 feet, yet they're capable of altering habitats and raising water levels. By creating slower pools of water upstream, low-head dams allowed industrial, municipal and agricultural entities to easily divert water. But many of these structures have outlived their purpose. They sit abandoned in streams and rivers because they're tricky and expensive to remove — sometimes costing nearly a million dollars — and ownership is not always clear. These outdated dams are still posing a risk for Hoosiers today. From the water, they can look small and unassuming, but they've continually proven to be deadly to swimmers and kayakers. As water flows over the crest of the dam, it can form deadly hydraulic currents. This phenomenon can trap swimmers in a sort of sideways vortex that experts say is almost impossible to escape. 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A judge let the removal permit move forward, and New Albany filed an appeal. The city has since claimed, in a 109-page document Director of City Operations Michael Hall shared with IndyStar, that no one knows who owns the dam and "DNR refused any ownership or responsibility." The document also claimed removing the dam would 'severely impact the recreation opportunities available in the creek, such as fishing and wading." After AJ's death, New Albany Mayor Jeff Gahan declared a State of Emergency and the city attempted to make the dam safer by adding stones on the downstream slope to eliminate the hydraulic current. The action resulted in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ordering the removal of the rock because the city did not acquire a permit. The DNR filed a separate legal proceeding over the lack of a similar permit. Neither case has been resolved. 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Malott's suit claims New Albany officials were notified in 2021 the dam is "dangerous to humans," and urged the city to "see the human safety value of removing this structure ..." The same year, Clarksville officials passed a resolution stating the dam was an "acknowledged 'attractive nuisance'" during high-water flows. Despite those concerns, the suit alleges the public was encouraged to recreate at the dam. The lawsuit said the Silver Creek Landing billboard was in place on May 27, 2024, when AJ and some friends went to the landing to explore and play. There were no signs warning them of the danger of what the boys called a waterfall, just the billboard. "As A.J. and his friends were jumping off the 'waterfall,'" the lawsuit says, "A.J. slipped and landed in deadly hydraulic currents, which took his life." 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Advocates of the dam say the structure creates more opportunities for recreation but Sweeten said that dam removal is almost always the best option. It can improve fishing, vitalize ecosystems, and most importantly, eradicate danger for Hoosiers outdoors. 'One of the saddest things I've ever heard in my entire career is listening to a mom or a sibling of a young person who needlessly lost their life at one of these dams. Why they're there is bewildering to me,' said Sweeten. 'How someone can justify leaving something that would cause someone else to get hurt like that is, it's just bewildering. It's hard to understand.' The Silver Creek area was AJ's favorite place to hang out with friends. He didn't know it was dangerous, Mallot said. AJ would never spend a sunny day inside, even during the winter, his mom said. He would go outside and meet up with friends every chance he could. The 14-year-old was a ball of light making friends wherever he went, Malott said. 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LAPD fires flash-bang grenades, less-lethal rounds at protesters
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LA County will comply with ICE if feds bring warrants: Supervisor
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