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Efforts to retrieve man from Florida sinkhole are stopped

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Jeremy Bush, center, tried to save his brother from the sinkhole that opened up in their house at 240 Faithway Drive in Seffner, Florida. He waits outside the house with family and friends as officials access the situation, March 1, 2013. (Photo by Skip O'Rourke/Tampa Bay Times/MCT)

(MCT) — Florida officials said Saturday evening they hadn’t found the body of the man swallowed by a sinkhole two days earlier, and planned to stop looking.

A somber-faced county administrator told reporters in Seffner, Fla., that the now-60-foot-deep sinkhole, which forced other families in the Tampa-area neighborhood to evacuate, was simply too deep and too dangerous for efforts to continue.

“At this point it’s really not possible to recover the body,” Hillsborough County Administrator Mike Merrill said after extending his condolences to the family of 37-year-old Jeff Bush.

Even before officials called off the rescue efforts, a painful realization had become evident for Bush’s brother Jeremy. The last thing he would ever hear from his brother were screams. Muffled cries for help coming from the chasm that claimed him.

“I really don’t think they are going to be able to find him,” Jeremy told Reuters on Saturday. He “will be there forever.”

Jeremy told reporters he woke up Thursday night to something that sounded like a car crash. Then came a scream. By the time he got to his brother’s room, the sinkhole had already swallowed Jeff’s bed and dresser. Jeremy jumped into the giant opening.

“The hole was still caving in, but I didn’t care,” he said. “I just wanted my brother, man.”

Jeremy was stuck in the debris when Sheriff’s Deputy Douglas Duvall arrived at the home. Duvall yanked him from the hole, and the two were able to escape.

“I saw that something needed to happen, and I just did it,” Duvall said in a video posted on the Sheriff’s Office website.

The two residences flanking the pale blue home where Jeff Bush lived are at risk, officials said, and the families had to evacuate Friday. The family members, accompanied by firefighters, were allowed to return for about 20 minutes Saturday to gather some belongings.

As rescuers, engineers and reporters swarmed the street for the second full day, tensions ran high among residents.

“I’ve had nightmares,” Soliris Gonzalez told the Associated Press. “In my dreams, I keep checking for cracks in the house.”

A memorial with stuffed animals and flowers had cropped up near the home by Saturday. A sheriff’s deputy escorted Brenda Bush as she dropped off another bouquet of flowers and a balloon in honor of her son.

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