Brownout may have had
role in tot's death
Closest paramedics were
on another call
By
Debbi Baker
, UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
Karen Kucher
, UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
Hieu Tran Phan
, UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
Originally published July
21, 2010 at 11:29 a.m., updated July 21,
2010 at 10:38 p.m.
SAN DIEGO — San Diego fire
officials said Wednesday that their
department’s cost-cutting “brownouts,” which
idle equipment, may have contributed to the
choking death of a toddler in Mira Mesa.
Bentley Do, 2, died at about 9:40 p.m.
Tuesday after choking on the first gum ball
he ever tasted, his family said. Authorities
said police officers arrived roughly five
minutes after the 911 call, and that
firefighters and an ambulance reached the
home some 4½ minutes afterward.
The national standard response time for
firefighters is within five minutes, 90
percent of the time.
“Brownouts had a negative impact on our
ability to provide service in this case.
What I cannot say is whether we could have
been able to save Bentley’s life had we been
there sooner,” said Javier Mainar, chief of
the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department.
Paramedics have specialized medical
training and carry equipment — such as
forceps — that could be used to try to grab
an item lodged in a child’s throat, said
fire department spokesman Maurice Luque.
Bentley’s relatives are struggling to
understand the delayed action.
“The dispatcher told us to please wait,
to stand by,” said Du Le, one of Bentley’s
cousins. “We kept looking at the fire
station across the street from our house and
asking why nobody could come.”
That was Station 38, about a block away
from the family’s home on New Salem Street.
At the time, its crew was responding to a
trauma call in another part of Mira Mesa in
Station 44’s district, Mainar said.
The engine at Station 44 was out of
service because of the brownout and its
truck crew, which doubles as a hazardous
materials team, had been called to an
emergency in the South County neighborhood
of
Nestor, where abandoned waste had been
found, the chief said.
Bentley’s family disputes the
authorities’ time logs. Le estimates that
officers showed up 10 minutes after the 911
call, and that fire officials followed five
minutes later.
“We think the crews tried their best,” Le
said, “but we still wonder if they could
have been here sooner to save little
Bentley.”
The boy was the oldest child of Nam Do
and Mien Nguyen. The couple had married
after meeting in
Ho Chi Minh City,
Vietnam, where Do works as an architect
for a U.S.-based company.
Nguyen eventually immigrated to the
United States and gave birth to Bentley in
April 2008. She is now six months pregnant
with the couple’s second child.
The family was eating dinner Tuesday when
Bentley opened a kitchen cabinet and took a
thumb-sized gum ball. His grandfather had
bought the candy for the household’s older
children.
“Nobody had any idea that Bentley got the
gum until he ran to us, pointing to his
throat to show that he was choking,” Le
said.
The adults tried to dislodge the gum ball
with their fingers. They hit the boy’s back
repeatedly. They ran to a neighbor, a nurse,
to plead for assistance. They tried to do
CPR on Bentley as the 911 dispatcher
instructed.
“Nothing was working,” Le said. “He was
convulsing. Blood was coming out of his nose
and ears.”
When two police officers arrived, they
administered CPR and chest compressions,
Mainar said. By the time firefighters and an
ambulance crew came, Bentley had turned blue
and stopped moving.
Le said Bentley and his mother were
supposed to leave Wednesday for Vietnam to
visit Do. The family had planned a send-off
party for that morning, which instead became
a gathering of mourners waiting for autopsy
results from the Medical Examiner’s Office.
Do is expected to reach San Diego today
after rushing to take a flight home. His
family hasn’t told him that Bentley died; he
thinks his son is still in the hospital
emergency room.
“We are too afraid to give him the truth.
He might kill or injure himself in
distress,” Le said.
Mainar said his department’s goal is to
respond to an emergency within the national
standard. The city’s current track record is
about 54 percent, he said.
“We fell well short of that in this
case,” Mainar said.
The brownout plan, which began Feb. 6,
calls for as many as eight of the city’s 47
fire engines to be idle at designated
stations, which saves an estimated $11.5
million annually in overtime expenses.
Firefighters from those stations fill in
for colleagues who are sick, injured or on
vacation. The cost-cutting measure helped
close a $179 million budget gap.
In April, Mainar warned city officials
that the plan was increasing the risk of
death, injury and property loss due to
lengthened response times.
Frank DeClercq, president of the San
Diego City Fire Fighters Local 145, said he
hopes the incident will prompt citizens to
tell city officials that public safety is a
priority.
“As firefighters we want to help people
when they need us, to the best of our
ability,” he said. “To know it took 9½
minutes there, it is gut-wrenching in my
heart.”
Mainar said the brownout plan is
scheduled to be discussed at the City
Council’s Public Safety and Neighborhood
Services Committee meeting next week.
Councilwoman Marti Emerald, the
committee’s chairwoman, has tried
unsuccessfully to restore cuts in the fire
department’s budget. She issued a statement
Wednesday offering condolences for Bentley’s
death and pledging to “continue efforts to
restore funding for our fire and rescue
services.”
“The death of this young boy is a
devastating loss for his family and
community,” Emerald said.
Councilman Carl DeMaio, who represents
Mira Mesa, also issued a statement offering
sympathy. “Our focus should be on meeting
the needs of the family — supporting them
and comforting them,” he said.