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Mom who fell in shark tank 'just freaked out'

Alison Rooney and daughter Amber
Alison Rooney and daughter Amber  


Editor's Note: CNN Access is a regular feature on CNN.com providing interviews with newsmakers from around the world.

(CNN) -- Ten visitors on an after-hours tour of the Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans, Louisiana, had a scare when they fell into a shark tank after their footbridge collapsed. No one sustained serious injuries in Wednesday's accident.

Alison Rooney, who fell into the water with her 2-year-old daughter, Amber, joined CNN anchor Paula Zahn to discuss the ordeal Thursday.

ZAHN: You must feel very lucky.

ROONEY: Oh, extremely. Extremely. I can't even tell you.

ZAHN: Tell us what happened.

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A platform at a New Orleans, Louisiana, aquarium collapsed, dumping 10 people into a tank full of sharks, but no one was seriously injured. (August 8)

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Aquarium visitors fall into shark tank 
 

ROONEY: Well, we were doing a behind-the-scenes tour of the aquarium for the members, and they had the platform we were working on. Of course, me and my daughter were at the very end. Ironically, the man was telling us that if anybody ever fell into the water, the sharks are well-fed and they would scatter. They wouldn't come to the commotion.

Well, not even two seconds later, sure enough the whole thing just collapsed. It cracked in the middle, and then the sides fell down. Me and my little girl -- thankfully I was holding her to my left [tightly] -- so when we fell in, we went under the water.

There was a coral reef, and I grabbed on to the reef, and we bobbed up. Most people grabbed on the roof also. At that point, part of platform was attached. One of the workers was there. She climbed down onto the reef and started pulling a couple of the children out. At that point, I gave her my little girl. I was more concerned about her than anything.

She got on the platform [safely], and then I started to get nervous about the sharks. First, I was just worried about her drowning because she's only 2. She's small. She can't swim.

Once she was on the platform, I was OK. I had to swim across the tank to the other side and get pulled out. And then at that point, they were all still stuck on the platform, and I didn't even think about it at the time, until after I got out, but that platform could have collapsed just as well.

So what they had to do is [go] and [get] ladders, and they put them on top of the reef, and they tied them with rope, and then they put boards on top of that, and they [made] just like a chain with people, and they just passed the kids. Mainly kids and a few of the workers on the platform that were stuck in the middle like an island, and they just passed the kids out.

ZAHN: How long, Alison, were you in the water, then? After you got her out ...

ROONEY: I don't know about the time. It was a good few minutes. It was very scary. It was one of those things when you're really high up, and they tell you not to look down. I was scared to look down to what I might see. When I first looked down, I saw a stingray right underneath me, and I just freaked out. I was scared to death what I would do if I saw a shark.

ZAHN: Were you screaming?

ROONEY: No. People were very, you know -- people were more screaming after they got out, and you know, they were shocked because the kids, for the most part, most of the kids were still on that platform. So people were screaming more once they got out and, you know, realized because [everyone was] still in shock once they fell in.

But we moved -- I had 5-year-old nephew; he was closer to the front, and he fell. He and my little girl, they're the ones that went to the hospital. He had a bunch of scrapes and a bump on his head, but he's doing fine now. They're both in good condition.

ZAHN: Did you get scratched up [on the reef]?

ROONEY: Yes, ma'am. I don't know if you can see. But my whole arm, it's all scratched up. It's doing a lot better now. But it was really messed up.

ZAHN: The problem with coral is you can often get infected inside, and it burns like crazy. Does it hurt?

ROONEY: Not really. Not unless I really put pressure on it. It's OK. My little sister, she's 14. She also fell in. She had a cut on her foot and a cut on her hand, and she had to grab my 5-year-old cousin and drag him to shore to where they could pull him out.

It was terrifying, especially when you have so many family members in there and not knowing if you're even going to get out, you know.

ZAHN: Tell me about Amber. Do you think she has any clue as to -- the dunking that she went through?

ROONEY: She has somewhat of a clue. I don't think being that's she's so young, she has the idea of severity. She was pretty quiet as it happened. But on the way home, she started talking. And what she was saying -- that we slipped and we fell into the water. And last night, she woke up quite a few times screaming, "Mommy, hold me," because that's what I was doing; she just wanted me to hold her tight when we went in the water.

But today she was talking a little bit about the sharks in the water. But I don't think she associates sharks with the big teeth. Doesn't associate them different than regular fish. My cousin Wesley, he understands. He's 5, and he is terrified. He was very, very upset.

ZAHN: So do you ever plan to visit an aquarium again anytime soon?

ROONEY: Not anytime soon. I'm going to wait till I'm very sure she's OK. As far as I go, the only time I really go is with her. So we're going to be OK. We'll eventually go back but not anytime in the near future.



 
 
 
 







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