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before the video begins, i'd like to statea few things. this video contains some very disturbing andviolent stories coming from multiple emergency workers such as police officers, emts, andfirefighters. some of them only shared one story, whileothers shared multiple, which is why some might seem connected. some stories are very short, while othersare longer. i ask that you please respect them in thecomments as these were very traumatic experiences for themi hope that this video spreads awareness on how hard their jobs are and some of the thingsthey deal with.
if you can't handle extremely gruesome stories,this may not be the video for you. that being said, let's begin number 1. back when i was a young military police officer,i got a call to a car accident. when i arrived i saw this black suv smashedalmost completely flat on the side of the road.(it had been hit by a semi) one of thefirst things i noticed was a car seat and stuffed animals all over the road. my heart skipped a beat, i had just becomea father myself and that was all i could think about.
luckily, the driver of the suv didnt havehis kid in the truck when he decided to drunkenly run the redlight. both the semi driver and the drunk survived,but when the semi hit the truck somehow it knocked off the hood of the suv, and it skippedand rolled and found its way to a motorcyclist three cars down from the intersection andkilled him instantly. his wife said he had just got back from iraqand one of the first things he spent his money on was a motorcycle, and he was just out enjoyingan evening ride, just happy to be back home. thats a horrible thing, finally getting homeafter months and months of hardships, just to be killed by a drunk driver.
i always concidered myself one of the easygoing police officers that let people of the hook and just wrote warnings, but after that,god forbid i catch a drunk driver. number 2. the worst one for me was an attempted suicide. not because of the "victim", who had verysuperficial cuts to her wrist, found naked and was extraordinarily intoxicated. her 9 year old daughter, though, that waswhat hurt. she was sitting in her nightgown, huddledon the floor of the bathroom, her mom's blood all over the floor and her nightgown.
the only thing she said was "she made me watch,she said it was my fault. will she be okay?" that one still hurts. number 3. got a call around 2am for an "unknown medical"which is always a kind of "uh oh" thing for us. as soon as we pulled up all the cop had tosay was "well, i don't even know." walked up to a lady unconscious in front ofher house that had her face cut similar to the joker and her throat slit.
she was in her pajamas, no bag, no id, nobelongings at all outside. her door was locked and there was a dog barkinginside, all the lights were off. no one knew what the hell happened and noone seemed to know any information about this lady. no name no age, nothing. she was alive when we got to the hospital,i hope she's alright today but i often wonder who did that to her and why. number 4. the next 5 stories are from the same person.
i work the other side of the radio. police/fire/ems dispatcher and 911/non-emergencycalltaker for 4 years now. calls with kids are the worst. after a while, most calls start to run togetherin your head. drunks, domestic disturbances, drivers withroad rage issues. but the calls with kids - those tend to stickwith you. there was the 12 year old girl whose fathershot and killed her mother, attempted to kill her, then shot and killed himself. the kiddo - covered in blood - ran to a neighbor'shouse for help, where they made her call 911
herself as they didn't want to get involved. number 5. there was the unresponsive 18 month old boy- called in as a drowning - that i couldn't get back. turned out daddy had killed him - severe bluntforce trauma to the head. to this day, i still remember telling thatson-of-a-bitch that he'd done a good job listening to my cpr directions while emergency responderswere on the way. number 6. there was a fatality car fire that initiallycame in as a brush fire in a field.
five calls in, and passersby are now sayingit's a car on fire. next caller says there's a man on fire rollingaround on the ground outside the car screaming for help. we were on scene with fire crews and medicsin less than five minutes, vehicle was fully involved and burning too hot to do anythingbut fight to control. male was incoherent, and flown via helicopterto hospital. once the fire was out, we found the remainsof a toddler girl, still strapped in her car seat. that one stayed with all of us for a while.
number 7. there was a man trapped inside a burning vehicle,unable to get out. i wasn't the one to take that call. my co-worker stayed on the line with him whilethe guy burned to death. because there was nothing else to do otherthan be there with him. my co-worker stayed together while he wason the phone. as soon as the call disconnected, he vomitedat his console. you never forget the screams a man makes whileburning to death. it doesn't even sound human.
number 8. there was a beautiful 17 year old girl whosemother left her home alone for the weekend after a verbal altercation. mom knew daughter had a history of depressionand suicidal ideation and left her alone to "think about what she'd done." daughter hung herself in the garage with anextension cord. she used a metal garden arbor as her anchoringpoint. she was at least a day dead, and we had topry her hands loose from the sides of the arbor where she'd tried to pull herself backup after she jumped.
the table behind her was covered in scuffmarksand footprints where she'd almost managed to swing her legs back up and under her again. it was profoundly sad. i love my job. i love my co-workers. i love what i do. but if you don't learn early on how to leavework at work - how to not carry that shit home with you - you'll go crazy. you won't last.
most folks who make it as a first responderend up with a terrifically bleak and warped sense of humor. there's a reason for that. number 9. christmas eve, i respond with fire and emsto a full arrest. it was called in as a witnessed collapse. she was in her fifties. we work her for 15-20 minutes and rush herto the er. we later find out she had been dead for hours...
her father had been the one to call. he had alzheimer's and had seen her fall andforgot about it for a few hours. so not only did this man's daughter and caregiver die on christmas eve, but he had witnessed the whole thing. it's horrible to think he may have "discovered"her multiple times. number 10. i'm an emt. had a call for a pedestrian hit by car onrural road. we haul ass over there and find a twelve yearold female in the road with her dad standing
over her. she was riding her bicycle in her drivewaywith her whole family out in the lawn. she road into the road and was immediatelyhit by an older man driving a large old cadillac. the car was driving at 55-60 mph and becauseof the bicycle this girl hits the windshield, but her head hits the passenger side column. the girl doesn't die on impact and is insteadbleeding out through the large piece of her skull that has been half caved in. the girl can't talk but she's blinking andmaking sounds. her dad, who had been drinking for the betterpart of the day - sees the whole thing.
he immediately runs out into the road andstarts doing the only thing he's ever seen from tv - cpr. thanks to his woefully drunk version of cpr,he not only crushes her ribs and lungs, but effectively helps her bleed out faster. to make things worse, i have a brand new paramedicwith me, who has never seen anything like this. almost as soon as we arrive this girl hasno pulse and blood is everywhere. a volunteer firefighter showed up on sceneand is trying to pull the dad off the girl. dad and the firefighter get in a full on fight.
we get there, assess her and try to controlthe bleeding but she's gone. no pulse, massive trauma, no lung sounds,head caved in, laying in a pool of blood bigger than she is. her whole body is just broken. another ems unit shows up and it takes meand the other crew to pull my partner away from the girl, who is grey. as soon as we pull him away, the father beginsscreaming about losing his little girl and runs into his house. the older man in the caddy - realizing she'sdead - begins yelling "oh my god i've killed
a little girl." then things get worse. the old man in the caddy (who hit her) fallsdown on the pavement and has a massive heart attack. he dies an hour later. meanwhile dad is inside the house drinkingsome kind of whiskey as fast as he can before coming back out bottle in hand, completelyout of his mind, and attacking things in his yard. the girl isn't an only child, she's the secondyoungest of 6, and all of them were outside
watching this go down. other units arrive on scene, we end up transportingdad, the driver of the caddy, and the volunteer firefighter (who sustained from holding backthe dad). i go out of my way to avoid that stretch ofroad. my partner quit a week later. number 11. another notable call was what was called inas an attempted suicide a few years back. a literal blood bath. according to the husband, his wife lockedherself in the bathroom with a knife and tried
to kill herself. he said he was unable to open the door tohelp or stop her. got there, door was unlocked, lady had herthroat cut open and both wrists were severely cut. i do not believe for one second that thiswoman did this to herself. not for a second.. i don't believe anything ever came of it,and i have no clue what happened to the woman. number 12. this one isn't really creepy or scary, buti think it's pretty cool and worth sharing
anyway. we had a cpr job for a man in his 50s. got a pulse back on the way to the hospitalbut usually we don't hear anything about the patient after that. i attended a funeral (for someone unrelatedto this patient) about a year ago and saw the guy that was dead on my ambulance justhanging out standing next to me. it was a definite wtf moment but it was reallycool to see him alive. number 13. i've seen some pretty gruesome murders andaccidents.
saw a woman stabbed over 50 times. a guy whose head was completely caved in byhis steering wheel. plenty of suicides via shotgun to the mouth. the one that stands out to me the most wasn'tfatal, and it wasn't even that gruesome. some guy got high on pcp and thought everyonewas a demon. an older woman (early 60s) was driving byand he decided to fight her. pulled her out of her car and pummeled herface. knocked her teeth out, bruised her face realgood, gave her brain damage. she was conscious throughout the entire ordealand i was the first on scene.
we had to fight the guy for a good 3 minutesuntil we got him into custody. he was a big guy and got roughed up prettygood but he was feeling no pain at all. my taser had absolutely no effect. we only got him into cuffs when 6 officersheld him down and pulled his arms into place. he then proceeded to spit blood on us. it shocked me because she was minding herown business when this asshole decided to ruin her life. it was random and unprovoked. if i'm not mistaken she had to quit her jobdue to memory issues from the brain injury.
number 14. my friends dad is a cop, he once told me thisstory. keep in mind this was during a really badice storm a few years ago, and in the country, about a good 15-20 minutes from a town, andwasn't a very busy road. "i got a call from a woman saying she hadn'ttalked to her mom in a few days, which was weird since they talked everyday. went to go check on her, drove up to the address,and saw a truck sitting in gate. i got out and walked up. i didn't see anything in or around the truckand decided to walk past.
that's when i saw it. an old lady was by the mailbox, she fell intoa puddle and had literally frozen over. fire department had to come to basically burnher out. then i decided to walk up to the house aftercalling in what happened. the door was slightly open, i walked in andannounced myself, no answer. i walked around, and her husband had diedstaring out the window at her. he was handicapped and in a wheelchair. he didn't have any power in the house fora week, and didn't have a cell phone. he died watching his wife freeze to death.
number 15. my grandfather was a fireman for the localair national guard. he knew a few of the pilots and became prettygood friends with one of them. one day he's on duty and they get a call aboutone of the jets (f-4 or f-100 at the time i believe) with an engine problem. the plane was circling the airport tryingto get a safe approach. long story short he ended up crashing andas you can imagine jet crashes rarely end well. the fire squad arrived on the airfield toa pretty large debris field.
nothing was identifiable but my grandfatherknew his friend was in the plane so he started searching frantically. eventually he found a gray round object insome rubble far from the crash, he picked it up only to realize it was his friends helmet....knowingthis was not a good sign he slowly turned it around and saw that his friends head wasstill in the helmet. no body anywhere to be found, just his headin his helmet about 100 yards from the crash site. one would think that this would turn you awayfrom firefighting but he had it in his blood. he went on to be captain of a local fire departmentwhere he witnessed a lot of other things including
a woman who had commited suicide by lightingherself on fire, children drowned in pools, his best friend/neighbor cutting his brakealartery with a chainsaw, and performing cpr for 30 minutes on that same neighbor, whilewaiting for an ambulance to come after the young neighbor boy came over crying becausehe couldn't wake his dad up. there are a ton more that i can't rememberright now. through all of this he said there was onething that kept him going, and that was the one day where he had the opposite of a horrorcall. instead it was a woman in labor, very in labor. they weren't going to make it to the hospitalin time so my grandfather ended up delivering
the baby in the back of the ambulance. this, he said, made his 30+ year career allworth it.
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