In the United States, a police officer said about how to beat a 8-year-old boy by breaking snowballs jumping into a frozen pool.
Sergeant Ayeron Thompson was called there at the New Harmony in Utah, where a boy ran out of the pond was dumped into a pond where he was floating 25 feet below the edge of the floor.
He said that he could have been around 30 minutes into the water.
According to a Washington-based Sheriff's office, the boy, Jason, was admitted to the hospital.
The "miracle on Christmas" is the father of the company that describes this rescue operation.
Talking to the reporters, she told the reporters that she had gone to a particular area of the tank after a woman told her that she was above the ice sheet.
After a short distance between the ice sheets, he cautioned that "ice is thick and can not break through with his hands." "So I jumped over the ice and then cut it off," Thompson said.
He then pointed out that the depth and coolness of the water had begun to find the boy.
"I was floating in the water that was up to the neck ... I was moving my hands down and I knew I would find him anyway," he said.
"After seeing the boy's face, he pulled his head over the water and immediately called the assistants," said Thompson.
The Thompson newspaper reports that Thompson was praised by the staff and community who worked with him as "big player" and that he could not do anything without help in the emergency service.
Sergeant Ayeron Thompson was called there at the New Harmony in Utah, where a boy ran out of the pond was dumped into a pond where he was floating 25 feet below the edge of the floor.
He said that he could have been around 30 minutes into the water.
According to a Washington-based Sheriff's office, the boy, Jason, was admitted to the hospital.
The "miracle on Christmas" is the father of the company that describes this rescue operation.
Talking to the reporters, she told the reporters that she had gone to a particular area of the tank after a woman told her that she was above the ice sheet.
After a short distance between the ice sheets, he cautioned that "ice is thick and can not break through with his hands." "So I jumped over the ice and then cut it off," Thompson said.
He then pointed out that the depth and coolness of the water had begun to find the boy.
"I was floating in the water that was up to the neck ... I was moving my hands down and I knew I would find him anyway," he said.
"After seeing the boy's face, he pulled his head over the water and immediately called the assistants," said Thompson.
The Thompson newspaper reports that Thompson was praised by the staff and community who worked with him as "big player" and that he could not do anything without help in the emergency service.
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