'You could see the fear in his eyes' | Boating
accident survivor urges caution near dams
Michael Hopkins and Dave Morris were fishing near Ft. Loudoun Dam when the current pulled them in and the boat capsized. Hopkins survived, Morris did not. LOUDON COUNTY, Tenn. — Every Sunday for the past four years, Michael Hopkins and his stepdad Dave Morris have gone fishing near Ft. Loudoun Dam. That was the case on Sunday, May 24, 2020. "Everything was going great, we were having the best day we'd ever had on the lake out there," said Hopkins.
The pair reeled in the
biggest fish they'd ever caught together that day.
It's also the last day they
spent together.
Hopkins and Morris were fishing
near the dam, which was spilling that morning.
They were baiting their lines
and didn't notice where their boat was headed.
"Once I realized I was going
toward the dam instead of getting pushed back down river
like we should have been, I tried to start the boat and it
wouldn't start," said Hopkins. "Next thing I know it was
like Niagara Falls coming down into the damn boat. The boat
was under in seconds."
The two jumped from the boat at
separate times. They were wearing life vests and floating in
the water.
They made eye contact one last
time.
"You could see the fear in his
eyes," said Hopkins."Next thing I know I got sucked under
and that was the last time I saw him."
Hopkins said he thought he was
going to drown, and that it was the scariest moment of his
life.
He was rescued by nearby
boaters.
Morris' body was found later
that day.
"I don't want anyone to have to
go through that, it was terrible," said Hopkins.
TVA said Ft. Loudoun Dam was
spilling about 250,000 gallons of water per second that
morning.
Death from the dam's strong
waters is a tragedy that happens all too often.
People also died when boats
capsized near this dam in 2018 and 2019.
"We recommend
that people don't get within about 100 yards of that
because again the water conditions can get very. very
dicey as you get closer to the dam," said Jim
Hopson with TVA.
Hopkins said he will
fish there again, but safely.
He promised Morris he'd
go back and catch the big fish they lost that day.
"If they're spilling
don't go up there stay back past the signs," he
said. "Don't do it, it's not worth it."
Morris'
family set up a GoFundMe to
raise money for funeral costs.
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5/27/20