AUSTIN, Texas -- A Texas sheriff said Thursday that three hog hunters from
Florida died in an underground tank filled with sewer gas after one of
them apparently tried rescuing their dog after it fell into the hole,
followed by the other two jumping in to save them.
The bodies of two men and a woman, as well as the dog, were pulled from
the tank in a cornfield on the rural outskirts of Austin. Bastrop County
Sheriff Maurice Cook said the hole was a cistern with an opening roughly 4
feet (1.2 meters) wide and containing 8 feet (2.4 meters) of water, as
well as hydrogen sulfide gas.
He said the chain of events started early Wednesday in the middle of the
night with one of the men apparently getting into the cistern to rescue
the dog, which he described as a bloodhound. Clothing and boots belonging
to the other two hunters were found near the hole, suggesting they removed
them before also jumping in, Cook said.
He said authorities believe the hunters were overcome by hydrogen sulfide
gas in the hole and sank to the bottom.
“There was no cover. This was just an open hole in the middle of a
cornfield," Cook said.
The victims were identified as Delvys Garcia, 37; Denise Martinez, 26; and
Noel Vigil-Benitez, 45. All were from Florida.
Cook said the cistern had a “high level” of hydrogen sulfide. He said
stagnating water and the decay of other animals that previously died in
the cistern could create levels that would be deadly.
The hunting party included a fourth person, from Texas, who did not go
into the hole. Cook said that hunter told authorities the dog escaped from
their truck and that they tracked it using a device on the dog's collar.
Efforts to recover the bodies were hampered by concerns from dive teams
about the gas and the integrity of the structure's walls, he said. The
tank had “strong fumes, similar to those of a septic tank, coming from the
cistern," according to a statement from the sheriff's office.
https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/texas-sheriff-3-hog-hunters-florida-
died-underground-102172895