A day after the car they were in plunged into a frigid pond in St. Louis Park in predawn darkness, three young survivors remained hospitalized Friday, one of them in "very, very critical" condition, the family's attorney said.
Despite a harrowing 26-minute rescue effort by police officers and firefighters, two other children, Zenavia Rennie, 5, and Alarious Coleman-Guerrido, 7, died Thursday. All six occupants of the car were part of an extended family.
The driver, Marion Guerrido, 23, of Brooklyn Center, had driven her boyfriend to his new job and was taking the children to school or day care when her four-door 1998 Pontiac Grand Am sedan went off the ramp at 6:16 a.m. She escaped, apparently through the driver's side window, and stood on its nearly submerged roof with a good Samaritan who swam out to try to help.
The children, tangled and tossed amid debris, remained in the car as it continued to sink to the bottom of the murky pond by the interchange at Hwys. 7 and 100.
"She tried frantically to remove the children from the sinking vehicle," said attorney and family friend Rick Petry. "This is a horrible, horrible tragedy and accident."
The car, which had been heading west on Hwy. 7 before skidding off the ramp, landed in water that was "quite deep," an estimated 8 to 9 feet, and "incredibly cold," said State Patrol Lt. Eric Roeske. A resident of the Brittany Apartment complex overlooking the pond heard screams and called 911.
In their emotional descriptions of the rescue, the first responders said Guerrido was in too much shock to communicate other than to scream, "My kids! Save my kids!" The car, 50 feet from the pond's edge, continued to sink.
St. Louis Park police officer Aaron Trant, the first to reach the pond, said he "didn't know what I was about to see." His heart sank when he learned children were trapped in a submerged car, he said.