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McHenry man dies in accident at Fox Lake marina

A McHenry man died Thursday after a Bobcat flipped upside down and trapped him in the water at Ben Watts Marina in Fox Lake.

The man who died was 46-year-old Mark Amore, a firefighter with the Lincolnshire-Riverwoods Fire Protection District, Fox Lake Police Chief Jimmy Lee said.

Amore was a former lieutenant with the McHenry Township Fire Protection District, where his father, Wayne, was the district’s first full-time chief.

In a Facebook post, McHenry Mayor Wayne Jett wrote Amore had a “heart of gold” and would light up a room.

“The amount of love he had for his family and friends was evident,” Jett wrote. “You will be greatly missed by so many.”

In their own Facebook post, the Lincolnshire-Riverwoods Firefighters IAFF Local 4224 wrote there were no words to express what the Amore family and their fire family are going through.

“The sudden [loss] of a man with so much life and energy is beyond heartbreaking,” they wrote.

Amore, according to his Facebook page, was a heavy equipment operator at Pirtano Construction Company.

Battalion Chief Larry Van Hoorelbeke of the Fox Lake Fire Protection District said his team was dispatched at 2:20 p.m. Thursday to Ben Watts Marina at 116 South Route 12 for a water rescue. When crews arrived, they found a Bobcat upside down in the water, with Amore still inside the cage.

Lee said a preliminary investigation found that Amore was operating the Bobcat machine, grading the parking lot, spreading gravel and making the lot level.

“He misjudged the edge of his seawall and rolled into the water,” Lee said. “Unfortunately, [with] the configuration of the piece of equipment, he was pretty much trapped inside the operator compartment.”

Divers from the fire protection district pulled Amore out of the water. He was then taken to Northwestern McHenry Hospital in serious condition, where he succumbed to his injuries.

The machine was taken out of the water and will be inspected, Lee said, and the police department contacted the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

“It’s a tragedy,” Lee said.