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Volunteer diver searches not for bodies — but 'sons or daughters'

A diver wearing goggles and scuba gear climbs aboard a surface from the water.
Juan Heredia
Juan Heredia is a rescue diver who travels across California and Oregon offering his services.

Juan Heredia is a volunteer rescue diver with a gift for finding victims. For the last year, he’s traveled to stretches of water across California to Oregon. The problem is — not everyone wants his help.

Early on May 1, Camille McGee’s car plunged into the Trinity River in Northern California. McGee and her partner, Michael Cox, escaped from the vehicle and made it to shore. But their 9-month-old son, Oliver, was swept away by the current.

Trinity County Search and Rescue searched for days. Then Juan Heredia heard about the case. By day, he’s a mortgage broker in Stockton. In his free time, he helps families like Oliver’s.

“First of all, I don't search for bodies,” Heredia said. “I search for sons or daughters.”

When Heredia arrived at the Trinity River, he said search and rescue refused to let him dive, saying the water was too dangerous.

But he stayed in contact with Oliver’s family. And after the county search team left, he returned.

“‘They were mean to me,’” Heredia said he told the family about the sheriff’s department. “‘But I'm going to come for you.’”

Before he dives, he said he asks for a picture of the person he’s looking for. He keeps that image in his head as he goes underwater.

Only a few hours after entering the river’s rushing water, he saw Oliver’s leg.

For Heredia, finding Oliver is something he’s trained his whole life for. Growing up in Argentina, he fished with his father and often dove in when their hook was caught.

“I was able to jump in the water with no mask, no fin, no nothing, and just swim down the river and take the hook out so we can keep fishing,” he said.

Heredia, 53, has also worked as a dive instructor. He began going on rescue operations last summer for families near his home in central California. Soon, people started recognizing his name.

“All the social media blew up,” Heredia said. “Everybody started tagging me for any person anywhere in the world.”

A man stands behind a truck wearing a wetsuit with diving gear in the truck's bed. A river can be seen in the background.
Juan Heredia
Juan Heredia started the non-profit Angels Recovery Dive Team.

He founded the non-profit Angels Recovery Dive Team in 2024. A little over a year later, he’s recovered over a dozen bodies.

But the Trinity River wasn’t the only place where authorities refused his help.

This summer, three rafters were swept over Dillon Falls on the Deschutes River. The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office recovered two of the bodies. But they couldn’t find the third.

So Heredia showed up, thinking it was just the job for him. Authorities disagreed.

Heredia posted a video describing the interaction to his nearly 100,000 Facebook followers.

“If I dive, if I jump in the water, they're going to arrest me,” he said.

The sheriff’s page soon received more than 1,000 comments urging the department to let Heredia dive.

“It's been completely blown out of proportion,” said Jason Carr with the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office. “It's just a misunderstanding from the general public about how these operations work.”

Carr said areas where search and rescue teams operate are treated like crime scenes. There are considerations for evidence, and it’s important for people not to interfere while officers work.

The department also doesn’t want to be held liable if an unvetted volunteer is injured while searching, Carr said. And besides, the department has its own highly trained team.

“This is a professional group of volunteers,” Carr said. “This isn't just your neighbor down the road who decides they want to go help out.”

Heredia stood down at the Deschutes River and drove back the seven hours to Sacramento. Since then, he’s changed his approach. He won’t attempt a dive while county search and rescue is working unless authorities give him permission.

“This can mean diving early in the morning before they begin their search, or later in the afternoon when they retreat,” according to a post on Heredia’s Facebook page.

But for Heredia, the hardest part of this work isn’t necessarily failed attempts like the trip to the Deschutes River — it’s what comes after success.

“Many nights after I found the son or daughter, that's the hard part,” he said.

On the Trinity River, he waited with Oliver until a family member showed up.

“He was just a beautiful baby in my arms,” he said. I didn't want to let… go until somebody opened their arms for the baby.”

It’s not just sheriff’s departments worried about his safety. Heredia has a wife and two children who worry they could lose him. But he said they’ve decided he can’t turn his back on a calling.

So he keeps driving towards lakes and rivers, hoping someone wants his help.

Justin Higginbottom is a regional reporter for Jefferson Public Radio. He's worked in print and radio journalism in Utah as well as abroad with stints in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. He spent a year reporting on the Myanmar civil war and has contributed to NPR, CNBC and Deutsche Welle (Germany’s public media organization).
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