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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Man cuts off two fingers to save life


William Messenger and Jarrad Todd were fishing from this boat Sunday when it became lodged against a logjam. Messenger's fingers were pinned. Associated Press
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Annie Flanzraich Associated Press

SEATTLE – With his hand wedged between his boat and a log, and his future son-in-law off getting help, William Messenger decided he was out of time. He pulled out a pocketknife and sawed off two of his fingertips to free himself from the sinking vessel.

Minutes later, his future son-in-law arrived with help, a pry bar and other tools to separate the boat from the log. Messenger was rushed from the Wynoochee River in southwestern Washington to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, where a hospital spokeswoman said he was in satisfactory condition Monday.

She did not know if surgeons had been able to reattach the fingertips.

Messenger and his future son-in-law, Jarrad Todd, 29, were fishing on the Wynoochee on Sunday afternoon when rapids swept their 16-foot drift boat into a logjam. The side of the boat slammed against a log, pinning Messenger’s left index and middle fingers. The pressure of the water held the boat in place.

The boat was turned upstream at a 45-degree angle and began to fill with water. Todd escaped and went to a nearby home in Aberdeen for help, Scott said. In the meantime, Scott said, Messenger was straddling the quickly filling boat and began to worry it would sink before Todd returned.

Grays Harbor County Undersheriff Rick Scott said Messenger, a 51-year-old fisherman from Ocean Shores, might have made a different decision if he had known how quickly Todd would arrive.

“Hindsight is 20-20. If he’d have known help was not that far away, he might have held off taking the steps that he did,” Scott said.

“It’s one thing to think about doing that, but it’s another to actually execute the plan.”

The hospital spokeswoman said she did not have the family’s consent to release further information regarding Messenger’s condition Monday.