CBS/AP/ October 23, 2010, 11:10 AM

Killer Shark May Have Been Great White

The huge shark that attacked and killed a body-surfer off the central California coast may have been a great white, a spokesman for the local sheriff's office says.

The victim, Lucas Ransom, 19, was body-boarding two feet away from his friend, Matthew Garcia, who was surfing. Garcia says he heard a desperate cry for help. Within seconds, a shark flashed out of the water, bit into Ransom's leg and pulled him under in a cloud of blood.

"When the shark hit him, he just said, 'Help me, dude!' He knew what was going on," Garcia told the Associated Press as he recounted his friend's death. "It was really fast. You just saw a red wave and this water is blue - as blue as it could ever be - and it was just red, the whole wave."

As huge waves broke over his head, Garcia tried to find Lucas Ransom in the surf, but couldn't. He decided to get help, but turned around again as he was swimming to shore and saw Ransom's red body-board pop up. Garcia swam to his friend and did chest compressions as he brought him to shore.

The 19-year-old already appeared dead and his leg was mauled, he said.

"He was just floating in the water. I flipped him over on his back and under-hooked his arms. I was pressing on his chest and doing rescue breathing in the water," Garcia said. "He was just kind of lifeless, just dead weight."

The University of California, Santa Barbara, junior had a severe wound to his left leg and died a short time later on Surf Beach, the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department said in a statement.

The beach, 130 miles northwest of Los Angeles, is on the property of Vandenberg Air Force Base, in Lompoc, Calif., but is open to the public.

Sheriff's deputies patrolled the coastline to search for Ransom's missing leg but were only able to recover the body-board, which had a 1-foot segment on the side bitten off.

Federal and state Fish and Game officials were working to identify the type of shark that attacked Ransom.

"The size of the teeth and the width (of the bite in the body-board) are going to help the experts determine what kind of shark this is," Drew Sugars, of the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office, told co-anchor Chris Wragge on "The Early Show on Saturday Morning." "We have not determined the type. The witness (Garcia) did say that the top of the shark was gray, the bottom was white. This is typically a great white, but we're not in a position to confirm that, Hopefully, by Monday, we'll be able to determine what type of shark this is, but the teeth marks will help us in that determination."

Sugars says officials hope the shark itself "is long gone. We're not going to search for it at this point."

As is protocol at Vandenberg, he adds, the beach involved will be closed for three days. Nearby beaches have warning signs posted but remain open.

The ocean was calm and beautiful before the attack, with large wave sets that the friends had been tracking all week as they moved down the West Coast from Alaska, Garcia said.

The shark, which breached the water on its side, appeared about 18 feet long, Garcia said.

"There was no sign, there was nothing. It was all very fast, very stealth," said Garcia, 20.

Authorities have issued several warnings this year after great white shark sightings up and down the California coast.

There have been nearly 100 shark attacks in California since the 1920s, including a dozen that were fatal, according to the California Department of Fish and Game. But attacks have remained relatively rare even as the population of swimmers, divers and surfers sharing the waters has soared.

The last shark attack on Surf Beach was in 2008, when what was believed to be a great white shark bit a surfer's board. The surfer was not harmed.

The last fatal attack in California was that same year, when triathlete David Martin, 66, bled to death after a great white shark bit his legs about 150 yards off of a San Diego County beach.

Randy Fry, 50, died from a great white attack in 2004 while diving off the coast of Mendocino, north of San Francisco Bay.

In 2003, a great white shark killed Deborah Franzman, 50, as she swam at Avila Beach, about 30 miles north of Vandenberg.


1/2

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
19 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
gerryrigger says:
Can sharks see color, especially the color red? If so could it be that the shark was attracted to the color of the bodyboard and tentatively chomped on it (and the surfer) to investigate whether it was an animal carcass? At any rate, I think bodyboards and even wetsuits should imitate the colors and/or patterns of poisonous marine animals that ocean predators would steer away from.
reply
jamessamans replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Sharks don't see particularly well. They can detect the presence of living things in the water through the electrical signals given off by nerves, so large animals attract their attention more easily. They also use taste as a way to identify things, so literally they're more inclined to bite something just to see what it is.

Great Whites typically hunt in the early dawn, though, and despite their frankly fearsome abilities as hunters, they prefer to hit from below when their prey can't see them. (This is very helpful in particular when they hunt dolphins, which use echolocation to find things and thus can detect them when they're facing them.)
linkicon reporticon emailicon
sltorlo says:
Leonard430, you ARE an idiot!! Swim in the oceans and take your chances! We are in THEIR environment, not the other way around. I feel bad for this poor kids family.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
John_Merritt says:
If that is truly the board Lucas was riding on, it does not appear those are the bite impressions of a great white unless it is an infant. They have a wider snout. Regardless that is just tragic that a young man enjoying the days of his youth would have to incur the wrath of any shark. My condolensces to the Ransom family.
reply
jamessamans replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
"Wrath" may be a bit overstated, as the shark has little vested concern regarding the identity of its prey. But certainly this is a great shame.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Leonard430 says:
I think we should get all the fishermen to go out all along the Ca. coast and get these sharks and rid them from off the Ca. coast. We don't need these preditors lurking around around our waters. We need safe beaches.
reply
angelofurnightmare replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Its this kind of thinking that has screwed up the entire food chain worldwide over the last 100 years...these things happen...people need to understand the danger when they enter the water
marjo200 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
@leonard430 you are an idiot. Seriously one of the dumbest comments I've ever read.
See all 5 Replies
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Kittydog13 says:
What are the odds?I mean i'm only turning 14 on october 25, 2010.My brother and I used to swim with Lucas in Paris for swim meets, however, I was alot younger and my brother was younger to of course but he was the same age as Lucas.All I can say from when I used to swim along side with him and my brother was that, he was fast, and a great person to hang around with, and a great freind at that.For I did not talk to him alot or really know him, he will be remembered as a great freind, and a hero to many.
reply
jamessamans replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
The odds are not high. One is thousands of times more likely to be killed in a car accident en route to the beach than to be attacked by any shark.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
thrushjaz says:
Duh...there's only two sharks 14-20 ft. long and great whites are known to be in that area. Feel bad for the students family.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
leftcoastrebel says:
More pictures of the boogie board with shark bites here:

http://www.leftcoastrebel.com/2010/10/photos-pictures-boogie-board-shows.html
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
dougd120 says:
if the idea of a shark it is, it is.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Wildozer says:
The teeth marks and bite radius on the board do not leave much doubt as to the identity of the shark. Add the description of the witness and it is pretty clear that it was a great white.

Tragic accident.
reply
jamessamans replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
You're assessing the teeth marks and bite radius from the distorted photo shown on this Web site and making that assessment with near-certainty, even though the experts who have the board in their possession haven't yet made that same determination? Huh.

I can't see what difference the identity of the shark makes in this case, though.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
lilbear925 says:
Very unfortunate for this fellow to lose his life, but sharks have been known to do this sort of thing. There is not much a swimmer can do to protect against territorial great white shark attack if the shark is in the area.
reply
See all 19 Comments