Crime & Safety

San Onofre Beach Reopens After Shark Attack

The 35-year-old victim a North County single mom of three, is in a medically induced coma at Scripps, according to her mother.

CAMP PENDLETON, CA – San Onofre State Beach reopened to the public this morning, four days after a near-fatal shark attack prompted authorities to close the stretch of ocean shoreline near the border of San Diego and Orange counties.

Leeanne Ericson, 35, was swimming in the surf at the beach along the coast of Camp Pendleton about 6:30 p.m. Saturday when a shark tore off the back of her thigh "from her glute to her knee," her mother, Christine McKnerney Leidle, wrote on a GoFundMe.com page set up to help defray the victim's medical costs.

Ericson, a single mother of three from Vista, was hospitalized in critical condition and placed in a medically induced coma.

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"She has a long (road) ahead with several surgeries to go," her mother wrote. "She's now in Scripps Memorial Hospital fighting for her life."

The attack prompted authorities to close the military-owned beach and adjacent San Onofre State Beach for 72 hours. Signs warning of the possible presence of sharks will remain posted in those areas for another three days,said Rich Haydon, parks superintendent for the latter beach.

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Officials have received "a number'' of reports of shark sightings over the last few days, Haydon said.

The attack -- believed to have been carried out by a great white or a sevengill shark -- was only the 11th recorded in the area in the past seven decades. The most recent fatal shark attack in San Diego County was off Fletcher Cove in Solana Beach in 2008.

Nearly $54,000 had been donated to the victim via GoFundMe as of this afternoon.

Ericson's employer, Pacific Marine Credit Union, has also set up an account into which its customers can transfer money. Pacific Marine patrons can also donate in person at any of its locations, or over the phone by calling (760) 631-8700.

--City News Service contributed to this report/Image via GoFundMe