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David Stanley Ford

Police: 3 ND college students found dead in pond

By The Associated Press    Comments Comment on this article3
Published: November 3, 2009

DICKINSON, N.D -- Three missing North Dakota college softball players were found dead Tuesday in a Jeep pulled from a pond, and police said they believed the women were in the vehicle when they made two desperate calls to friends for help.

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Police Lt. Rod Banyai said officers are investigating the cause of the deaths and autopsies are planned. He said he believes the women were in the Jeep when they called for help, but he didn't know whether it already was under water when those calls were made.

"At this time, foul play is not suspected," Banyai said Tuesday night.

Authorities had been searching since late Sunday night for Kyrstin Gemar, 22, of San Diego; Afton Williamson, 20, of Lake Elsinore, Calif.; and Ashley Neufeld, 21, of Brandon, Manitoba.

The Dickinson State University students were believed to be in the white 1997 Jeep Cherokee with California plates when two of their friends received telephone calls before the lines went dead. Police described the first as a "very scratchy" call for help in which one of the women said they were near a lake and water.

Banyai said the 12-foot deep pond where the women were found is on a farm northwest of Dickinson, a city of 16,000 people about 100 miles west of Bismarck and 60 miles east of the Montana state line. Vehicle tracks were found leading into the pond Tuesday afternoon, he said.

"After that was located, the plane flew over the top and it could see that there was a white object in the water," Banyai said. The submerged vehicle was pulled from the pond about two hours later.

Banyai said the vehicle will be checked for defects. He said authorities don't know how it got into the pond.

Kyrstin Gemar's parents, Lenny and Claire, said during an earlier news conference at police headquarters, before the bodies were found, that they had talked to their daughter late Saturday night. Lenny Gemar said it was not uncommon for his daughter and her friends to go star gazing on the spur of the moment.

The women's families were not at the news conference where police announced the deaths.

Students at Dickinson State, where the women were stars on the school's softball team, led a prayer service Monday night that drew more than 300 people. Another service was scheduled at the 2,700-student school for Tuesday night.

"We are very deeply saddened by this turn of events and we are going to mobilize all of our resources to work with the families and the students on campus," Dickinson State spokeswoman Constance Walter said. "They will be greatly missed by their teammates and others."

The college lists Gemar as a senior business major who played third base on the softball team. Neufeld is a senior outfielder who is working on a degree in psychology, and Williamson, a junior, is a pitcher majoring in psychology with a minor in coaching.

Gov. John Hoeven issued a statement extending sympathy to the families and appreciation to those who participated in the search, "which ended in a way we all prayed it wouldn't."

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David Stanley Ford



Related Topics: Sports, Softball


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Not to detract from this tragic incident, but Myth Busters did a series on just this. If you don't panic, once the water pressure equalizes the doors can be pushed open. And even with power windows it is possible to open them under water. The battery takes a long time to drain. However, with the modern electronics that might not be the case anymore. Agree with Mark, keep a safety hammer in the glovebox just in case. My prayers are with the family. Very sad.
Doug, Midwest City - Nov 4, 2009 at 6:44 am
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Going underwater in a vehicle is a concern of mine. I've had some nightmares about it. I just got a special knife that has a glass breaker on one end and a seat belt razor blade on the other. I'm mainly concerned about the vehicle I have with electric windows. I think cars should come with a glass breaker. I don't worry so much with the soft top vehicle I drive. I think if you send kids away on road trips you should get a glass breaker and velcro it to the dash or put it in the glove box.
Sparky (Mark), Oklahoma City - Nov 3, 2009 at 10:32 pm
This is very tragic, so sad they couldn't make it out.
Sooner Born, Sooner Country - Nov 3, 2009 at 8:32 pm

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