KANSAS CITY, Kan. – A 10-year-old boy was decapitated as he rode a waterslide at a Kansas water park, sources told AP.
A person who is familiar with the investigation but is not authorized to speak about the boy’s death told The Associated Press Wednesday that Caleb Schwab was decapitated Sunday on the “Verruckt” ride at the Schlitterbahn WaterPark in Kansas City, Kansas.
Caleb, the son of a Kansas lawmaker, was in a raft with two adults who were not related to him when he was killed on the 168-foot tall ride. The other two were treated for facial injuries.
A spokeswoman for the waterpark declined to discuss the circumstances of the boy’s death.
The ride will remain closed for the rest of the year, and the water park is scheduled to reopen Thursday. “Verruckt” is German for insane.
A memorial service for Caleb will be held on Friday.
Water park witness: I saw him slide down ‘and then I saw the blood’
It was supposed to be just another summer day at the Kansas City water park until Jess Sanford and Melanie Gocke witnessed something that would be imprinted on their minds forever: the death of 10-year-old Caleb Thomas Schwab from a neck injury while riding the world’s tallest water slide.
Speaking to Brianna Keilar on CNN’s “New Day,” Gocke said she saw Schwab falling down the Verrückt slide, leaving a trail of blood as he went. The raft that was holding him seconds before was in front of him.
Witness to water slide accident: I saw him slide down, "and then I saw the blood" https://t.co/7EqQ8ToDxd https://t.co/zUYdNUrXBm
— New Day (@NewDay) August 10, 2016
“When I heard a noise that didn’t sound like it was supposed to come from that kind of ride, that’s when I turned around,” Sanford said.
“I didn’t understand what was going on so I only saw Caleb sliding down the last half of the slide, and then I saw the blood.”
Sanford recalled that as Schwab hit the end of the slide, his friend, frantic, called for help, with medics trailing soon after.
“They realized that he was dead, so I don’t think they tried to revive him,” Sanford said. Medics then tended to two women who had been riding in the same raft as Schwab and who sustained minor facial injuries.
The Verrückt — the world’s tallest water slide, at Kansas City’s Schlitterbahn water park — is known for its unparalleled, 168-foot vertical drop.
Sanford and Gocke, both teenagers, had just ridden the slide earlier that same day.
Gocke described the raft’s Velcro seat belts, and remembered testing out the straps to see how secure they were. She said she wriggled out of them without much effort.
“You’d think for something that’s supposed to be known for being the tallest slide in the world they’d have a little bit more secure straps than Velcro,” Sanford said.
Police said Schwab’s death was due to a neck injury but are still investigating the circumstances of the deadly accident. The boy was the son of Kansas state Rep. Scott Schwab and his wife, Michele.
Schlitterbahn was to reopen at noon Wednesday, but the park said the Verrückt slide will remain closed for the rest of the season.