Authorities believe a school teacher who was attacked by a shark while surfing on Saturday is dead. They have discovered wetsuit fragments and what they believe to be the teacher’s surfboard.
On Saturday, Walkers Rock Beach on South Australia’s west coast received a call from emergency services reporting a shark attack, according to a statement from the local police force.
Simon Baccanello, a 46-year-old teacher at the nearby Elliston Area School, has been recognised by local CNN stations but has not yet been officially identified by authorities.
Police said in a statement Monday that they had recovered “two items of interests in relation to the search for a missing surfer, presumed dead after a shark attack.”
One of them appears to be a piece of wetsuit material, while the other item is believed to be some small pieces of white polystyrene possibly from the surfboard, said police, who are sending the items to be forensically analyzed.
Trevlyn Smith, a unit manager from SES, previously told CNN affiliate 9 News that the remains of the surfboard they retrieved showed “one bite mark.”
After consulting with Baccanello’s family, emergency services said they would continue to search the area and surrounding beaches in the coming days after high tide.
His family issued a statement saying his death was a “tragic loss,” according to 9 News.
Baccanello started his stint at the Elliston Area School in January, according to his LinkedIn profile.
“He had a real keenness with his students to make them feel good to build those relationships with the students,” the school’s principal Chad Fleming told 9 News.
Pulteney Grammar School – where Baccanello taught in Adelaide between 2007 and 2009, and then 2022 – also issued a statement on Facebook.
“He is well remembered by the School community as a fine teacher, a generous friend and a genuine, authentic human being,” the statement said.
Shark attacks are relatively rare off South Australia – according to the Australian Shark Incident Database, there were 20 shark encounters in 2022, resulting in 14 injuries and one death.
South Australia only contributed one case that did not involve any injury.
In February earlier this year, a 16-year-old girl was killed by a shark while swimming in a river in Perth, Western Australia.