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Family, friends of teenage drowning victim advocate for 911 reform 1 year later

Family and friends remembered a Virginia teenager this weekend who drowned a year ago after a series of transferred 911 calls delayed rescue crews finding him.

Music and prayer led a celebration on Sunday at Riverside High School to remember 16-year-old Fitz Thomas of Loudoun County.

His mother, Pastor Michelle Thomas, said it was about keeping his memory alive and advocating for change.

“There’s a part of negligence and a part of ineptness and lack of training and care that really played a part in Fitz being denied access to on time emergency services,” Thomas said.

Fitz would have graduated in a couple of weeks.

Three days of events over the weekend included a block party, a memorial walk, a headstone dedication and a celebration service honored his life.

“It was just a beautiful, beautiful, beautiful time,” Thomas said.

She said she wants to see more transparency in the Loudoun County Fire and Rescue policy changes.

“It’s just unfortunate. We could do better, we deserve better,” Thomas said. “I hope that his life is the catalyst for policy change. It is not enough to hope for policy change, we have to get it.”

Insects, larva and a loaded gun confiscated at Virginia’s Dulles Airport in September

It's all in a day's work for airport security personnel. In the month of September, a sampling of confiscated items at Dulles International Airport in Virginia found insects, larva and a handgun loaded with 13 bullets. Airport authorities stopped a Centreville, Virginia, man from carrying a handmade gun loaded with 13 bullets onto his flight Sunday at Washington Dulles International Airport.
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