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  • 4
    Mar
    2013
    6:01pm, EST

    Sinkhole victim's family 'going through hell' — as second hole found nearby

     

    Demolition crews in Florida are hoping to get a better look at the sinkhole that swallowed a man after knocking down the remaining the structure above the hole. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

    By Gabe Gutierrez and Erin McClam, NBC News

    SEFFNER, Fla. — A  man who jumped into a chasm and tried in vain to save his brother from a catastrophic sinkhole said Monday he was frustrated that authorities haven’t done more to retrieve the body — even as another sinkhole opened up just a couple of miles away.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “They said it was dangerous, but you see this heavy equipment, you see that?” Jeremy Bush, choking back tears, asked reporters. “The house is still standing. The only reason the house fell is because they put the machines on it.”

    He said that his parents are “going through hell right now.”

    The first sinkhole opened last Thursday night and engulfed Jeff Bush, 36, who was in his bedroom. Jeremy Bush jumped in to save him and had to be rescued himself by sheriff’s deputies.

    Authorities have said that the cavity is so unstable that nearby houses are unsafe, and that it is too dangerous to send a crew to recover the body.

    On Monday, the long arm of an excavator parked in the street dug carefully through the remains of the house. Once crews finish demolishing the structure, authorities can get a better look at the hole and figure out how to stabilize and fill it.

    William Puz, a spokesman for Hillsborough County, said a crew would try later Monday to retrieve a china cabinet that was valuable to the family. The crew planned either to wrap the cabinet and lift it out or to send a worker in a bucket to save individual pieces.

    He said the crew hoped to finish demolition by the end of the day.

    Working gingerly, heavy equipment began pulling apart the house over the weekend, scooping precious belongings onto the lawn. A Bible, family photos, a jewelry box and a pink teddy bear were among the items saved.

    Workers penetrated the walls leading to the bedroom on Monday and got their first look at the sinkhole, which engineers estimate is 30 feet wide and 60 feet deep.

    Slideshow: Striking sinkholes: Earth opens up

    Luis Echeverria / AP

    A look at some of the most amazing sinkholes around the world.

    Launch slideshow

    Jeff Bush lived in the house, outside Tampa, with his girlfriend, their 2-year-old daughter and two other people. The others in the house were unharmed.

    Jeremy Bush said that his mother was waking up every hour and crying in bed.

    “No one ever wants to bury their kid before they go,” he said.

    Meanwhile, county officials received more bad news late Monday afternoon as another sinkhole was discovered less than two miles away, NBC’s WFLA reported.

    WFLA

    Seen here, the second sinkhole in Seffner showed up about two miles away from the first deadly one. No one was injured.

    The 10-feet deep sinkhole is located behind a home and officials say thus far there have been no injuries or structural damage.  

    465 comments

    I can't believe they cannot find this mans body ...This is crazy !

    Show more
    Explore related topics: florida, hillsborough-county, sinkhole, seffner-fl
  • Updated
    1
    Mar
    2013
    7:47pm, EST

    Massive sinkhole swallows Florida man — and it's still growing

    Sinkholes are most often found in seven states, including Florida, where the ground recently collapsed Thursday in Seffner. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

    By Gabe Gutierrez and M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    Authorities evacuated neighbors Friday around a sinkhole that swallowed the interior of a Florida house — apparently taking a man to his death — describing the sinkhole as "seriously unstable" and likely to keep growing.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Jeffrey Bush, 36, hasn't been heard from since he screamed as a 20-foot-deep by 20-foot-wide hole opened underneath his family's home near Tampa late Thursday. Officials and engineers were continuing their search for him Friday.


    "I couldn't get him out," said Bush's brother, Jeremy, who tried to rescue him. "All I thought I could hear was him screaming for me and hollering for me, but I couldn't do nothing."

    The sinkhole was still growing Friday evening, officials said, and residents of homes on both sides were evacuated.

    Engineers were using three-dimensional photos of the soil and other data to figure out the best way to stop its spread, said Bill Bracken, president of an engineering firm that was called in to assist. By Friday, the hole's "safety zone" — the land around it that was considered unstable — extended 100 feet, he said at a news conference. Meanwhile, it continued to deepen and presented a significant potential for what authorities called a "sudden collapse."  

    The sinkhole swallowed part of the interior of the house but left the exterior remarkably intact. The only thing sticking out of the hole was a small corner of a bed's box spring. Cables from a television led down into the hole, but the TV set, along with a dresser, was nowhere to be seen.

    AP Photo/Chris O'Meara

    Jeremy Bush, brother of Jeffrey Bush, breaks down Friday, March 1, while speaking about trying to rescue his brother.

    Officials lowered equipment into the sinkhole but didn't see any sign of life.

    NBC station WFLA of Tampa reported that six people were in the house when the sinkhole tore through it about 11 p.m. ET. All but Jeffrey Bush escaped.

    "They heard a sound they described as a car crash emanating from the bedroom," Hillsborough County Fire Chief Ron Rogers said outside the house in Seffner. "They rushed in. All they could see was part of a mattress sticking out of the hole. Essentially, the floor of the room had opened."

    The hole almost got Jeremy Bush, too. But Hillsborough County sheriff's Deputy Douglas Duvall arrived to save him, WFLA reported.

    AP Photo/Chris O'Meara

    Engineers work Friday, March 1, in front of a home where sinkhole opened up underneath a bedroom and swallowed a man in Seffner, Fla.

    Sinkholes are relatively common in Florida, but they don't always cause injury or major disruption.

    Officials said they didn't immediately know whether the neighborhood near Tampa has had problems in the past, but the threat is apparently evident enough that at least two companies in Seffner advertise their expertise in "sinkhole repair."

    "Florida sits on a system of caverns filled with water," Rogers said. "As that water moves up and down, it erodes those caverns, and from time to time they collapse."

    Michelle Acevedo, Elizabeth Chuck and Ian Johnston of NBC News contributed to this report. Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Related:

    • Massive Louisiana sinkhole prompts drilling to find source
    • Sinkhole threatens to swallow house, forces family (and its pets) to flee
    • Florida home crumbles under sinkhole pressure
    • Videos: Sinkholes in the news

    Slideshow: Striking sinkholes: Earth opens up

    Luis Echeverria / AP

    A look at sinkholes around the world.

    Launch slideshow

    This story was originally published on Fri Mar 1, 2013 7:32 PM EST

    449 comments

    What a way to bite it. Quiet evening at home, lights out just getting to sleep and the earth opens up underneath your house swallowing you in the process. Talk about terrifying.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: florida, hillsborough-county, featured, sinkhole, updated, seffner-fl

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