Friends recall missing Costa Mesa man
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Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- Jason Huntress was no daredevil. But he dared to go
places others would be afraid to go.
He was energetic, witty and outgoing. But he was also the first person
who would turn his back on a trivial argument.
Time was too precious and life too short for “Jakey,” who had the
cutest dimples and biggest, most radiant smile. He just had too many
places to go, explore, things to do.
“Jason was a poet who lived out his poetry,” friend John Bostwick
said. “He was an optimist, someone incredibly full of life. He was never
afraid to explore things more, to step out on the edge.”
But no one knows for sure what happened on the afternoon of July 4,
when the 33-year-old Costa Mesa man dove into the ocean off a boat in
Emerald Bay, near Laguna Beach. He never came back.
Sheriff’s Department Harbor Patrol deputies have been scouring the
deep sea for more than a week looking for Huntress, a Newport Harbor High
graduate who, family and friends say, spent a lot of time on the beach
and in the ocean. But they have had no luck yet.
Even as the search continues, Huntress’ family and hundreds of his
friends, whose lives he has touched simply and intimately, say they are
reconciling to face the inevitable.
While his parents remember him as a good kid and a talented young man,
his friends say they can never forget his ever-present deep dimples and
dazzling smile.
Jason Johnson has known Huntress since their days together at
Mariner’s Elementary School, where they played Junior All-American
football.
“His nickname was Porky because he was kind of chubby at that time,”
he recalled with a laugh.
Johnson said he is still in shock. He and his friends had hoped
against hope that this was a big joke, that Huntress would pop up from
the ocean with his mischievous smile, water trickling down his dimples.
It was almost a bizarre sense of hope his friends held on to, Matt
Patterson said.
“We were hoping he was playing a prank,” he said. “A bunch of guys
spent a whole day on the beach looking for him and calling out his name.”
But they refused to believe their dear friend was gone forever.
“When I heard the news,” said friend James Brennan, “I just finished
my dinner and told myself he probably got on another boat and ended up in
Catalina. Jason had this bad habit of not saying goodbye.”
But even Brennan knows that Huntress would not have abandoned his
friends riding on the Boston Whaler with whom he had gone to Emerald Bay
to spend the Fourth of July holiday.
What came as a shock to most of Huntress’ friends and his family was
the way he presumably died -- drowned in the ocean.
“He was a water man,” Kurt “Fuzzy” Schroeder said. “I’ve seen him swim
in Mexico in the dark with a flashlight. You’d think he’s smart enough to
go down there and figure it out.”
Friends said Huntress took every opportunity he got to travel around
the world. He has been to Mexico, Tahiti, Europe and Australia to mention
a few.
He was also creative, said Candace Campos, his girlfriend of 2 1/2
years.
“He was an amazing writer,” she said. “He loved music and painting.”
Campos said she still can’t believe he is gone.
“I’m in shock even now,” she said.
“But,” she added, “I think even though it was a tragedy, it was the
way he would have chosen to die.”
BOX
A memorial service for Jason Huntress is scheduled for July 21. For
more information, call Johnny McCray Jr. at (949) 645-6567.
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