Loved ones remember boater, 57, as 'giving'
By Jenna Carlesso • The Journal News • October 15, 2008
CONGERS - One of Jennifer Moccia's earliest childhood memories involves fishing with her father on a boat.
So it didn't come as a surprise to her Monday that he was doing exactly that just before he died.
"He loved fishing and he loved his boat," she said. "That's what I remember ... me and my dad fishing together."
Vincent Moccia, 57, was preparing to dock his boat at Stony Point Bay Marina after a fishing trip Monday when he apparently lost his footing. No one saw him fall into the river, but people at the marina contacted police after they heard someone calling for help and saw the boat idling near the dock, Lt. Peter Quinn said.
Moccia was probably in the water for about 15 minutes when Stony Point divers found him, Quinn said. Rescuers tried to revive him. Divers also did a search of the area to see if anyone else was in the water. No one else was found, and police think Moccia was alone on his boat. His cause of death is under investigation.
Meanwhile, Jennifer Moccia waited for a call from her father that never came.
"I told him to call me from his truck afterward," she said. "Then I heard from police."
Among family members and friends yesterday, Jennifer Moccia shared stories of the father she called "a man of all trades."
"He was talented in everything," she said. "There was nothing he couldn't do."
A plumber for Bruni & Campisi, a plumbing, heating and air-conditioning company based in White Plains, Vincent Moccia could do anything from tiling a floor to building a house, she said. Which is exactly what he did years ago when he constructed the family's New York Avenue home from the ground up.
"He was very skillful, very much a handyman," Jennifer Moccia recalled.
And he was popular in the lower Hudson Valley, she said, where he had spent most of his life.
Vincent Moccia was born and raised in Dobbs Ferry, where he attended grade and middle school in the Ardsley district, and later Mahopac High School.
He had worked as a sheriff in Putnam County before becoming a plumber, Jennifer Moccia said.
Vincent Moccia moved to Rockland County in his early 30s, when he met Christine, the woman who would become his wife of nearly 30 years. She died in January, Jennifer Moccia said.
"He gave his all to his family," she said. "He was very caring, very giving."
Christine Cabral, a family friend, remembers Vincent Moccia as a father figure.
"Whenever I was around, he was like a father type," Cabral said. "He was a really, really great guy."
Visitation for Moccia will be at Michael J. Higgins Funeral Home at 113 Lake Road in Congers from 7 to 9 p.m. today and from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. tomorrow.
A Mass of Christian Burial will begin at 11 a.m. Friday at St. Paul's Church in Congers, followed by a funeral service at Mount Hope Cemetery on Jackson Avenue in Greenburgh.
Reach Jenna Carlesso at jcarlessorb2@gr5tlohud.com or 845-578-2494.