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♦️ Crews with the Santa Cruz Fire Department and California State Parks responded to Panther Beach just after 5 p.m. following reports of two women in their 20s who had been swept out to sea.
Volunteer Fire Captain Kyle Breton said approximately eight rescue swimmers were deployed and were able to pull the women from the water, one to Yellow Bank Beach and the other to Panther Beach.
The woman at Yellow Bank Beach was airlifted up the cliffside by a helicopter, while the other was transported by a Stokes basket and was rushed in a separate ambulance to the hospital. One of the women had died from her injuries, and the other remains in critical condition, officials said.
"Both of these patients, we believe, were originally sleeping right at the keyhole, which is an area that catches people unaware." The term “keyhole” generally refers to a section of shoreline that allows access to a smaller stretch of beach.
Known as Rock Archway or 'hole-in-the-wall' beach is only accessible during low to medium tides. People often go through the keyhole to reach Yellow Bank Beach, only to get trapped there when the tide comes in.
The incident happened just hours before a mother and her two children were swept out to sea in Laguna Beach. Tragically, her 5-year-old daughter, Amada Mia Brown, did not survive. She was found 30 hours later, 300 yards off Christmas Cove Beach, nearly a quarter mile north of where she was last seen.
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