A normal summer day exploded into chaos in a Mississippi river, and one teenager’s split-second decision changed everything. Three girls were screaming. A car was sinking. The current was merciless. No one was coming fast enough. Then a 16-year-old boy kicked off his shoes, tore off his shirt, and dove into the black wa… Continues…
He didn’t wait for orders, backup, or certainty he’d survive. When the car plunged into the Pascagoula River, three teenage girls clung to its roof as the water rose and the current dragged them away. On the shore, 16-year-old Corion Evans saw what was happening and moved before fear could stop him. He stripped down and dove into the dark water, swimming hard against the current, reaching each girl and guiding them, one by one, back toward solid ground.
Exhausted but not finished, he watched as a police officer who had rushed in to help began to struggle in the same unforgiving current. Corion turned back into the river without hesitation. This time, he was saving the rescuer. Four lives were pulled from the water that night because a teenager refused to stand and watch. Honored by his city, he became living proof that real heroism is often quiet, sudden, and terrifyingly brave.