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Body of German Perez found in Housatonic

NORTH CANAAN — The State Police reported on Tuesday morning, Oct. 3, that they had recovered the body of German Perez in the Housatonic River, about one mile south of the spot in the river at North Canaan where his truck was found on Wednesday, Sept. 26.

Perez, 60, disappeared on Tuesday evening, Sept. 25, during that evening’s heavy rains. 

His truck slid into the Housatonic River at Lawrence Avenue in North Canaan that evening, probably between 6:30 and 7 p.m. 

The rain has sent the Housatonic River to flood stage in the days since then, churning it up and setting debris adrift, making it an extreme challenge for the State Police from Troop B and other rescue workers to find the truck and any signs of Perez.

The police began searching for the truck that night but were not able to locate it in the river until the middle of the afternoon on the following day. 

Perez’s body was not in the vehicle and the more difficult search — for his body — began. The rain continued, harder and harder, raising the river levels higher and higher and increasing the murkiness and the interfering debris. 

Challenges of the river

State Police divers braved the fast-running flood stage waters through the week. Also helping with the search were the Goshen Fire Department Dive Team; the Region 5 Dive Team, which includes members of numerous departments such as Lakeville Hose Company and Falls Village Volunteer Fire Department; and the Cornwall Fire Department  and the Cornwall Swift Water Rescue Team.

On Wednesday, Sept. 25, the water was fairly high, at about 5 feet at Ashley Falls, Mass., which is just to the north of North Canaan; and 3.5 feet at Falls Village, which is just south of North Canaan, according to data from the U..S. Geological Survey (USGS). 

By Friday, Sept. 28, the water had peaked at about 11.5 feet in Ashley Falls according to USGS data; and 7 feet in Falls Village, which is flood stage. A flood alert was issued on Thursday night, Sept. 27, for towns and roads along the Housatonic. 

Several local creeks and streams jumped their banks, including Burton Brook in Lakeville and the Salmon Kill in Lime Rock. 

The rough conditions made it extremely difficult to search for Perez’s body. There are eddies and currents in the river that can pull a body down; water at the bottom of the Great Falls rolls back in a circular motion, like a fast-moving and powerful washing machine; rocks under the surface can hold onto a body and keep it from reaching the surface.

By Tuesday morning, Oct. 2, Perez had not yet been found. The State Police dive teams were not able to search during the weekend because there was an equipment failure on the dive boat. The search resumed on Monday, Oct. 1; his body was found on the morning of Wednesday, Oct. 3.

Joyful, cheerful, kind

Perez’s close-knit family has been out walking the shores of the Housatonic River but the water has remained high,  murky and rough .

Perez, 60, and his family moved to Connecticut from their native Colombia. He worked in the maintenance department at The Hotchkiss School in Lakeville since 2000, according to school spokeswoman Danielle Sinclair. 

Perez worked in  the school’s Mars Athletic Center, where the towns of Sharon and Salisbury have adult lap swim privileges six days a week. Swimmers who took part in the program remember Perez as an upbeat and joyful presence in the halls of the athletic center. 

At one point, he decided to try and teach himself to swim, with guidance from the school’s health and wellness expert. Although he was not a natural swimmer, he was always cheerful and determined when in the water. 

Perez lived in Ashley Falls with his wife, Yeli, and his youngest son, Carlos, 24. 

Their oldest daughter, Leidy,  34, lives in Texas but returned home after her father’s disappearance. Their oldest child, German Felipe Perez, 37, lives in North Canaan. It was German and Carlos who realized something was amiss when their father was late returning home on Tuesday night.

‘He never wanders’

Perez had called German at 6:09 p.m. from the road, near The White Hart in Salisbury, and told him he would pick him up in a few minutes at his son’s home in North Canaan and bring him to his parents’ home for a visit. 

When Perez didn’t show up within the hour, the family knew something was wrong 

“German goes from work to home, he never wanders,” said a cousin of the family, Jonathan Bonett.

German, the son of the missing man, agreed. When his father hadn’t arrived as expected, he and Carlos went out to search for their father’s car. By around 8 p.m. they were worried enough to call the Sheffield Police, who then notified the Connecticut State Police at Troop B.

The Connecticut troopers found a spot along Route 44 where it looked like a vehicle had slid through the wire guard rail on the river side of the road. There were also signs on the road that indicated a car accident had happened there, according to North Canaan Fire Chief Brian Allyn. 

The search for the truck began that night in the river, whose waters were about 10 feet high, Allyn estimated.  A 2000 Toyota Tundra is about 70 to 71 inches tall, a little over 5 feet.

On Wednesday, Sept. 26, at around noon, Carlos called his local radio station in Massachusetts, WSBS in Great Barrington, and asked them to put out a request on air and on social media, asking for help in finding his father.

A few hours later, the State Police sonar found a black 2000 Toyota Tundra in the river. 

Efforts then began to pull it out of the water, creating some vehicular chaos as cars were detoured around back roads through the center of town.

The police would not confirm that it was Perez’ vehicle.

The river had begun to settle down by Monday, Oct. 1. But the rain began again that evening and continued into Tuesday.

“We just want them to find his body,” Jonathan Bonett said last week. “Waiting is agony.”

The family was called to identify Perez's body on Wednesday morning.

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