Less noted perils children face
Less noted perils children face
Michelle Malkin
http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20010630-35229534.htm>
A 4-year-old boy died last weekend at the Malibu, Calif., 
home of rock star Tommy Lee. How any right-thinking parents 
could entrust their child to a drug-addled celebrity who 
pled no contest to kicking his ex-wife (actress Pamela 
Anderson) while she held their newborn baby is beyond me. 
But that’s a column for another day.
Daniel Veres drowned in a residential swimming pool 
during a birthday gala for Lee’s eldest son. The 
circumstances of Daniel’s death are not unique to 
Hollywood. They are all too typical and dangerously 
overshadowed by anti-gun activists who monopolize 
public attention on rare shooting deaths among children 
at the expense of more common causes of childhood accidents.
“There’s a big pool party here, and no one was paying 
attention for a minute,” Lee told police on a tape of 
his emergency 911 call last Saturday afternoon. 
According to one report, Daniel’s caretaker left the 
boy after bringing him to the party so he could attend 
a rock concert. At least a dozen other adults were in 
attendance at Lee’s party, including parents, baby 
sitters, and several staff members of a preschool.
When Daniel was discovered floating face down in the 
shallow end of the pool, a crowd of people rushed 
recklessly to resuscitate him. According to Lee’s 911 
tape account, Daniel vomited water after he was 
retrieved from the pool. Asked by a police operator 
if the boy’s chest was rising and falling, Lee responded: 
“I don’t know. Everyone is pressing in on him.”
Once again showing what a stellar role model for 
children he is, Lee launched into a profanity-laced 
panic when the operator warned him to stop people 
from pressing on the boy’s chest all at once: “I 
know, there’s a bunch of people all doing their 
thing, so I don’t know what the to do.”
If just one clear-headed adult at the party had 
known how to administer CPR properly, Daniel might 
be alive today.
This needless tragedy at Tommy Lee’s serves as a 
chilling reminder that the gravest risks to children 
are often the least sensational and most mundane. 
While school shootings and accidental gun deaths 
involving toddlers garner front-page headlines and 
nightly news coverage and Million Mom outrage, child 
drowning deaths go largely unremarked unless they 
happen to occur at a celebrity home. If the gun-control 
crowd spent just a fraction of its resources on public 
awareness campaigns about the risks of childhood 
drowning and the importance of learning CPR, they 
could truly make a life-saving difference for America’s 
youth.
Drownings are the second-leading cause of unintentional, 
injury-related death among children 14 and younger, with 
more than 1,000 deaths a year. That’s 10 times the annual 
number of accidental shooting deaths for children 14 and 
under. (The leading cause of accidental deaths among this 
age group is motor vehicle crashes.) More than half of 
drownings occur in a pool at the child’s own home, and 
one-third occur at homes of friends.
About 50 children in the U.S. drown every year in 
5-gallon buckets yes, buckets many of which were less 
than half full, according to federal statistics. The 
government also notes that 77 percent of young drowning 
victims were missing for just five minutes or less. 
Most were in the presence of one or both parents.
In the wake of Daniel Veres’ death, some California 
officials are calling for new safety mandates. Many 
cities require fencing around new pools. In Orange 
County, Calif., where eight backyard pool drownings 
have already occurred this year, some local politicians 
want to require costly pool motion sensors that emit an 
alarm. Passing such laws “for the children” may assuage 
some guilt, but all the regulations and technology and 
wealth in the world won’t change a hard-learned truth 
that even Tommy Lee must now understand:
When it comes to protecting children, there is no 
good substitute for parental vigilance.

 
        


