A Southern California couple tried to save a swimmer killed in a crocodile attack while they were on family vacation in Mexico. Chris Bury and his fiance Jamie Yetter were at their hotel pool in Puerto Vallarta when they heard screams from the nearby beach at around 7 p.m. Friday. Thinking the victim was caught in a rip current, they rushed to help only to see the deadly attack unfold in front of them off Marina Vallarta Beach. “The crocodile had him by the thigh,” Yetter told ABC7. “The size of this crocodile, I mean, his head was as long as my torso, his tail thicker than my legs. He was just turning him, taking him under.” Jamie Yetter and her fiancé Chris Bury were on vacation at the time of the fatal attack and tried to help (ABC7)The San Clemente couple, on holiday with Yetter’s teen daughter to celebrate her high school graduation, described the scene as “pretty traumatizing”. Bury initially tried to throw the swimmer — later identified as a 28-year-old local man named Irving — a life preserver but he was unable to grab on to it. “I was in the water up to my waist, he was maybe 20 feet away... he was in shock and flailing” Bury told CBS News LA. “I hopped in [a] kayak. By the time it got to him, it had drug him under and then that was it. He was gone after that.”Local media in Mexico showed footage of the crocodile said to have killed the swimmer (Noticias Puerto Vallarta/ABC7)The victim’s body was found 12 hours later, following an extensive search by the Mexican Navy, lifeguards and other authorities, Jalisco Police told NBCLA. Footage taken from the scene and shared by local outlet Noticias Puerto Vallarta shows the crocodile in the surf before it was captured by authorities. Yetter told CBS News LA that the morning after the fatal attack the beach was still open and she could not see a ‘no swimming’ sign.The Jalisco State Civil Protection and Fire Department described it as an “extremely unusual event”, the network added. Although Puerto Vallarta is built alongside a crocodile habitat, official statistics say that fatalities are vanishingly rare, recording one death per 2.5 million people. A crocodile warning sign on a Mexican beach. Local authorities are said to have increased surveillance of the area since the attack (ITV News)A Jalisco government spokesperson said the start of the rainy season in late June had increased water levels and allowed reptiles to move to areas close to beaches, Jalisco Noticas reported. In the aftermath of the incident the government has increased surveillance in the area and reminded visitors to avoid locations where crocodiles have been reported, local outlets added.
California couple tried to save swimmer killed in crocodile attack at Mexico resort
California couple describe horrifying moment deadly attack unfolded in front of them in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico











