A Florida woman who jumped into the ocean to save a struggling swimmer has since learned that the man she rescued is a double murder suspect on the run. Belinda was on a morning walk near Riomar Beach in Vero Beach, Florida, when she heard faint calls for help. “I could hear a faint ‘help, help, help,'” she said. She spotted someone struggling in the water and ran in to help without hesitation.
She told the man to flip onto his back and let the waves carry him. “So, he got on his back, and he said, ‘I’m exhausted. I’m tired.'” Belinda kept pushing him to hold on. “I said, ‘Do it! Get on your back and stay on your back. Let the waves carry you. You can do it. Come on,'” she recalled. The two slowly made their way back to the shore together.
According to WSFA, once they made it back to shore, Vero Beach Police released a video showing Belinda kneeling beside the man and asking if he was okay. He replied, “No, I’m exhausted. I would never go out that far again,” and added, “I think I’m going to take a long vacation.” At the time, the comment seemed like nothing more than the words of an exhausted man who had just had a frightening experience in the water.
The man she saved is now wanted for killing two people
Police now believe the man was Jesse Ellis, a double murder suspect. Ellis is accused of fatally shooting his estranged wife, Stacie Mason, and her partner, Danny Ooley. Both Mason and Ooley worked for Indian River County in the public works department. The shootings left the local community shaken, as both victims were known public servants who had been part of the county’s workforce for some time.
The case took a stunning turn when officers later showed Belinda a wanted poster of Ellis and she immediately recognized him as the man she had pulled from the water. The moment was understandably shocking for her. It is still unclear exactly how Ellis ended up struggling in the ocean that morning, or how long he had been in the water before Belinda heard his cries for help.
Belinda said she had no idea who the man was when she pulled him from the water. Even after learning he is a homicide suspect, she said she would still have helped him. “I could not leave anyone in the water, no matter what,” she said, adding, “Everybody’s going through something.” Her reasoning was straightforward, she saw a person in danger and acted on instinct, the way she said any decent person would.
She did, however, admit that knowing what she knows now, she would have handled things differently once he was safely on shore. Rather than simply checking on him and going about her day, she said she would have called 911 immediately. Vacations can take some truly unexpected turns, much like the shock one woman felt when she found strangers relaxing inside her home after checking her dog camera while away.
The incident has raised serious questions about how close authorities came to losing track of Ellis entirely, given that he was apparently in the water just off a public beach. Unwanted run-ins can happen anywhere, as another woman discovered when a neighbor refused to leave her garage just as she was trying to leave for vacation.
Authorities are still actively searching for Jesse Ellis. His comment on the beach, “I think I’m going to take a long vacation”, now reads less like casual small talk and more like a clear hint at his plans to keep running from law enforcement. For Belinda, the whole experience has been a lot to process, and it serves as a reminder of just how unpredictable life can be, even on an ordinary morning walk by the ocean.
Published: Apr 7, 2026 11:33 am