Sydney shark attack victim named as 35-year-old mother Leah Stewart

WorldEnvironment
15 Jun 2026 • 7:22 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

Sydney shark attack victim named as 35-year-old mother Leah Stewart

The woman who was attacked and critically injured by a great white shark at a Sydney beach over the weekend has been identified.

Leah Stewart, 35, was attacked while she was out swimming with two friends at the popular Coogee Beach.

She suffered injuries to her lower left leg and arms and was admitted to St Vincent’s Hospital. “She has large flesh wounds to the leg and the arms that are going to require a lot of surgery,” New South Wales Ambulance inspector Mike Corlis told reporters at Coogee Beach.

Police and emergency personnel at Coogee Beach in Sydney (Reuters)

Ms Stewart was bitten only about 30 metres from shore. “The woman was pulled from the water by members of the public who commenced first ⁠aid,” police said in a statement.

A witness to the attack, Nicola Logan, told Reuters that she saw a “massive pool of blood” in ⁠the water, then “a lady kind of motioning to swim, lots of splashing, and then a ski paddler was out trying to bring her in”.

Paddleboard champion and off-duty lifeguard Charlie Verco, 25, who rescued Ms Stewart and brought her to shore, said he felt “very scared” when he saw the shark circling near the swimmers.

“I started paddling out to see if everything was alright and I could see something in the water,” he told Nine News. “There was a lot of blood in the water, I couldn’t really see what was going on. She popped up and the shark let her go and that was when I got close enough to grab her and put her on my board and take her to shore.”

In the aftermath of the attack, the local Randwick Council closed all beaches in the area for 24 hours. Authorities flew drones overhead under emergency provisions ⁠to scan for sharks.

Lifeguards putting up a warning sign on Coogee Beach (Reuters)

“It’s been a really tough summer of shark activity and shark attacks ​in Sydney ⁠and it’s something that the NSW ‌government is taking really, really seriously,” Tara Moriarty, New South Wales’s agriculture minister, said.

Ms Moriarty said the government would consider new measures to keep swimmers safe from shark attacks, including ‌using drones and other technology.

The incident at Coogee is the latest in a series of shark encounters off Australian shores.

Just last week, a man died after he was attacked by a shark while fishing off the coast of Western Australia. Last month, a 39-year-old man died after being attacked while fishing on Queensland's Great Barrier ‌Reef.

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