Sequim man critically hurt in attack in Mexico

Willy Rookard recovering from brain injuries, collapsed lung

You hear about these things, Christy Rookard said, and you think, ‘Oh my gosh.’

“We’re the ‘Oh my gosh’ people.”

What started out as a celebration of 25 years of marriage in late June turned into a kind of nightmare for Willy and Christy Rookard, after Willy was severely injured while the couple was vacationing in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.

Willy Rookard was airlifted to a trauma center in San Diego with a collapsed lung and a severe brain injury after he was grabbed by men in a car and dragged down the road early in the morning of June 27.

Willy remains in San Diego as he recovers from his injuries, Christy said.“My 25th wedding anniversary, (we) spent it in an ICU instead,” she said.

To help the family cover medical, travel and accommodation expense, an account at all First Federal community banks have been set up, as well as at online sites GoFundMe (www.gofundme.com/willyrookard) and Caring Bridge (www.caringbridge.org/visit/willyrookard).

Repeat encountersNo strangers to Cabo San Lucas, the Rookards consider the Mexico resort a favorite vacationing spot. At about 12:15 a.m. the couple, their 19-year-old daughter Alexis Rookard, and a family friend were in downtown Cabo on their way back to their hotel, capping their second day of hanging out with family and friends, when men in a silver car pulled up nearby.

“They weren’t teenagers — they were 30ish — and they asked, ‘Where are you guys headed?,’ Christy recalled.

“We kind of ignored them and just kept walking.”The car looped around the block and the men repeated the question, she said.“

We said, ‘What do you want to know for? Leave us alone’, something like that,” Christy said. “They kind of slowly drove off.”

The third time, Willy approached the car to tell them to “bug off” but the situation took a turn for the worse, Christy said.

“I don’t know exactly what was said — What I can say is, it really bothered Willy. He didn’t want to tell me something they said. He was really angry.”

The four walked away from the scene without a confrontation, but the Sequim group, seeking a safe ride home, agreed to walk to a nearby shopping mall to hail a cab.

“I don’t know what they wanted to do, if they wanted to rob us — I have no idea. Obviously, something,” Christy said.

“I didn’t know what their plan was and I started to get scared,” Alexis Rookard told KIRO-TV.

 

Grabbed and held

For a fourth time, the foursome encountered the men in the silver car.

“I was gathering up the girls (and) I didn’t see Willy go to the car, but when I did turn around, his arms were already inside the passenger-side window,” Christy said.

“It was obvious they were holding on to them and they were moving.”

Being held by his arm, Willy kept running to match the pace of the car but then simply couldn’t run any faster, Christy said.

He ran until he couldn’t, so they dragged him away, she said.

“Then they dropped him in the middle of the street and they left,” she said.

Christy and companions found Willy conscious, but bleeding profusely and non-responsive.

“He was making a god-awful, gurgling noise,” she recalls.

A woman nearby called for emergency help, and took the Sequim man to a nearby hospital. Later that day, Willy had been airlifted to Sharp Memorial Hospital in San Diego.

He was later diagnosed with a brain injury called a subarachnoid hemorrhage, his wife said.

“I don’t want the message to be (that) Cabo is a horrible place: We’ve been down there several times and never felt unsafe,” Christy said.

“It’s not our purpose to scare people. This could happen anywhere.”

 

Steady recovery

As of Monday, July 11, Willy Rookard was eating without a tube, walking with a railing and working hard at speech therapy sessions; he’s able to put together short sentences.

“When he got here he was unresponsive, so he’s come a long ways already,” Christy Rookard said.

“Every day he is progressing … Sometimes we can understand what’s he saying, sometimes not.”

But Willy will need some time to recover before he comes back home Christy said. To return to Washington state would require another risky and costly airlift, she said, so Willy is doing various forms of initial rehabilitation — physical, speech and occupational therapy — in San Diego.

“I’m not going to move him until he can fly on a commercial flight with me,” Christy said.

“Brain injuries are on their own time schedule to heal.”

She said recovery could take two, thee or four weeks.

“I need to be here to learn about his recovery,” she said. “We’ll see when he can go to a rehab facility. He’s not quite ready yet. He’s got a long journey ahead of him.”

The Rookard family has seen tragedy upon tragedy: The family lost Greg Valaske, Christy’s brother, in a single-car crash on June 19.

“I’m not even done mourning my brother,” she said.It didn’t take long for friends and acquaintances to show their support for the longtime peninsula residents and family, including their daughters Alexis and Bailey, Christy said.

“The support from the community has been amazing, with people that I’ve seen or who’ve donated. I’m so grateful and humbled by this.”

Willy Rookard owned Rookard’s Hardware, which has been open for more than 30 years and in the same family since 1988, until it closed in January 2006.

A longtime manager for First Federal’s Sequim Avenue branch, Christy Rookard works First Federal’s as Retail Training Specialist.

Active in the community, she has volunteered or participated in some capacity with the Sequim Food Bank, Sequim Lavender Weekend, Dungeness River Festival, Downtown Sequim Christmas Lights, Sequim Boys and Girls Club, a facilities planning committee for the Sequim School District, and Citizens for Sequim Schools. She is a Sequim High School graduate (1988).