A request for notice signs to be posted at California's Lake Piru is rapidly piling on marks after Merriment on-screen character Naya Rivera, 33, disappeared there not long ago.
The Change.org request with in excess of 25,000 marks is routed to Lake Piru, the encompassing Ventura Region and the territory of California. "Naya Rivera isn't the first, nor the last to disappear at Lake Piru," it peruses, portraying the waterway as "a profound lake with exceptionally terrible whirlpools."
"Individuals have been requesting a long time for the city to set up notice finishes paperwork for swimmers," it proceeds. "Local people of Ventura Region don't go to Lake Piru therefore! Vacationer have no clue about what they're getting into. Lake Piru needs signs. We're worn out on pausing. We need equity for every one of the individuals who got lost at Lake Piru..."
Yippee Amusement couldn't arrive at the creator of the request for input and a representative from the Lake Piru Diversion Center declined to remark when asked by Hurray Diversion.
Rivera, 33, is assumed dead after she disappeared at the lake on Wednesday. The Ventura District Sheriff's Specialization affirmed her vanishing on Thursday by means of Twitter. This week, the division shared a Twitter video that demonstrated the water's cloudiness at 30-feet down and on Saturday tweeted, "The quest for Naya Rivera proceeds at Lake Piru."
According to an incident report posted online by the sheriff’s office, Rivera rented a boat at the lake Wednesday afternoon and went out on the water with her four-year-old son. “The boat was found drifting in the northern portion of the lake with the child alone and asleep onboard,” the report reads. “Rivera’s son told investigators that he and his mother had been swimming in the lake, and he got back in the boat, but Rivera did not.”
Approximately 100 people are searching for Rivera in what is now a recovery mission. “Investigators believe Rivera drowned in what appears to be a tragic accident,” the report says.
In a press conference Thursday, Ventura County Sheriff's Sgt. Kevin Donoghue said, “In the lake, the visibility is terrible. This particular lake, in that area, there’s a lot of trees and plants and such that are under the water that can cause entanglements. It makes it unsafe for the divers and makes a more complicated search.”
He also had this chilling message: “If the body is entangled in something beneath the water, it may never come back up.”