Body found on California coast is triathlete who went missing amid shark sighting

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Body Found California Coast Triathlete Went Missing Shark Sighting Rcna251171 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

Erica Fox, 55, of Pebble Beach, went missing Dec. 21 amid a suspected shark attack as she swam with a group of fellow athletes in Monterey Bay.
A Coast Guard boat on the water
Coast Guard boats patrol Lovers Point in Pacific Grove, Calif., while searching for a missing woman, on Dec. 21.TODAY

A body found Saturday off California's Central Coast is that of a local triathlete who went missing amid a weekly swim in Monterey Bay, her father confirmed.

Erica Fox, 55, from nearby Pebble Beach was reported missing on Dec. 21 as she swam with fellow athletes. Two people told authorities they witnessed a shark in the water and what appeared to be an attack on one of the swimmers.

A body was found near Davenport in Santa Cruz County, roughly 30 miles north of where she went missing on Dec. 21, Sgt. Ryan Farotte of the Santa Cruz County Sheriff's Office said.

Fox's father confirmed to NBC Bay Area that it was his daughter's body.

Several agencies helped to set up a hoist system atop bluffs south of Davenport to recover the body from the beach below, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection unit for San Mateo and Santa Cruz counties said in posts on X early Saturday afternoon.

On Dec. 22, the initial attempt to find Fox was suspended after 15 hours of searching that included aircraft, drones, boats and divers from the Coast Guard, Pacific Grove police, the city of Monterey Fire Department, the Monterey County Sheriff's Office, and Cal Fire, authorities said.

One of the witnesses reported that they were driving to work and paused at a stop sign when, in the distance, they saw a shark breaching the water with what appeared to be a body in its jaws, Coast Guard spokesperson Christopher Sappey said on Dec. 22.

The shark went under and didn't immediately resurface, Sappey said, citing the witness.

Shark attacks remain rare in California, with 230 since 1950 resulting in 16 fatalities before Fox’s death, according to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. Ocean activities, including surfing’s explosive growth in the early 1960s, have burgeoned since midcentury, but those figures have not, it said.

Though the type of shark involved in the sighting is unknown, the Department of Fish and Wildlife said at least 200 of the state’s 230 attacks involve white sharks, which thrive in cold water made habitable by their self-regulating body temperatures.

Authorities said Fox was among a group of 17 people on Dec. 21 who participate in a weekly Sunday swim across the bay when she went missing off Lovers Point near the top of the Monterey Peninsula in the city of Pacific Grove. Her fellow swimmers came safely to shore following the incident, authorities said.

Erica Fox had participated in two half-Ironmans, numerous triathlons, and had for two decades' taken part in an annual triathlon called Escape From Alcatraz, her father, James Fox, said on Dec. 22.

She and her husband had been together for 30 years, Fox said, and she was kind, empathetic and disciplined.

"Swimming was her forte," he said. "She just loved that."

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