Columbus Police: Animal Lover Died Trying To Save Dog

COLUMBUS, Ind. (AP) — A woman whose family said she developed a love for animals at a young age lost her life trying to save a dog from a river, police said Monday.

A witness reported seeing a woman matching the description of Jacqueline Watts, chasing a small dog on Friday afternoon. Columbus Police Lt. Matt Harris said.

Officers found the 33-year-old Indianapolis woman's body Saturday morning on a sandbar by the Flatrock River in the city's Noblitt Park.

"There was a lot of speculation into what occurred," Harris told a news conference. "The bottom line is we lost a very special person."

Police on Sunday also recovered the body of Ringo, the dog Watts was chasing, from a river bank. A poster reporting the dog was missing said Ringo had cataracts and was deaf. CBS 4 Indy reports.

A statement from Watts' family was read at the news conference. It said she volunteered with rescue groups and fostered multiple dogs and rabbits.

"We know that Jackie gave her life for what she believed in," the statement said.

Following an autopsy, Bartholomew County Coroner Clayton Nolting ruled Watts death an accidental drowning, pending toxicology results.

Watts' family reported her missing Friday after she dropped off two dogs and a rabbit with relatives in Columbus, Harris said. Her idling, parked car was found that day about half a mile from where her body later was found.

(TM and © Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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