Skip to content


Live coverage: Large tornado outbreak in Oklahoma City area. Two Moore schools leveled with missing & trapped children.

7 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Live updates from KFOR-TV

Oklahoma City Fire live 

A meteorolgist at KFOR-TV said a short time ago the devastation from today’s tornadoes in Oklahoma will dwarf the infamous May 3, 1999 tornado outbreak. KFOR-TV’s live coverage of the aftermath, and the continuing outbreak is above.

Particularly hard hit is Moore, Oklahoma where there are reports of two schools leveled, with searches of those schools continuing.

AP:

Authorities say an elementary school in an Oklahoma City suburb took a direct hit from a mile-wide tornado.

Gary Knight with the Oklahoma City Police Department says there is no word of injuries from the elementary school. Knight says the school suffered “extensive damage” on Monday afternoon. He did not say which school was hit.

Neighborhoods in Moore, Okla., are flattened and blown apart, with shards of wood and pieces of insulation strewn everywhere. Television footage also showed first responders picking through rubble and twisted metal in the suburb south of Oklahoma City.

There were no immediate reports of injuries.

The suburb of Moore was hit hard by a tornado in 1999. The storm had the highest winds ever recorded near the earth’s surface. 

More from AP:

A mile-wide tornado churned through the Oklahoma City suburbs, destroying homes for the second day in a row Monday, as part of a severe weather outbreak that was expected to spread in other parts of the Plains and Midwest.

A massive black-and-blue cloud dragged across the landscape just south of Will Rogers World Airport.

Television video showed debris from homes and businesses being carried aloft as the twister rolled through Moore, a community on the south side of Oklahoma City. There were no immediate reports of injuries. 

In advance of the storm, the Oklahoma House of Representatives stopped work so Capitol employees could take shelter in the basement. Television and radio broadcasters urged residents to take shelter because the storm’s strength and size.

“We’re just waiting to see what happens. It’s a mile-wide tornado. It’s still grinding out,” said Mark Meyers, a spokesman for the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office. “We are currently on standby for tornado response. Whatever happens, we’ll be ready to respond.”

The strongest winds on earth — 302 mph — were recorded near Moore during a tornado May 3, 1999.

The Storm Prediction Center in Norman had predicted a major outbreak of severe weather Monday in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma.


Storms on Sunday killed two people near Shawnee, about 35 miles southeast of Oklahoma City. Gov. Mary Fallin earlier Monday took a tour of the areas hardest hit and she expressed concern that, with power out, Oklahomans might not receive warnings about the new round of storms.

Pottawatomie County Sheriff Mike Booth said a 79-year-old man, who was later identified as Glen Irish, was found dead Sunday out in the open at Steelman Estates, a mobile home park near Shawnee. The state medical examiner’s office said Monday that a 76-year-old man, Billy Hutchinson, was found dead in a vehicle.

The office said both men lived in Shawnee, but the city wasn’t hit by the tornado and it wasn’t immediately clear if either or both lived in the mobile home park, which is near the city.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

The not so funny rest of the naked man on the PGFD ladder truck story. PGPD say he shot a man before climbing the rig.

2 comments

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Previous coverage of this story

WTOP.com:

A man who was found naked on a fire truck was high at the time and now faces an attempted murder charge for shooting his childhood friend.

Prince George’s County police arrested Mohamed Sulaiman Bah, 24, of Silver Spring, and charged him with shooting a man in a car parked in the 11900 block of Beltsville Drive. He also faces a charge of first-degree assault.

Police found the injured man, whose name has not been released, about 6 p.m. Wednesday, after officers were called to Beltsville Drive for a report of a car accident. The injured man was in the backseat of the car suffering from a gun shot wound.

He remained in the hospital in critical condition Thursday, police said.

Police have no motive for the shooting and say the victim was Bah’s childhood friend. They were in the car with a third man, who was driving, when Bah turned to the back seat, shot his friend, then stripped naked, and ran from the scene, police said.

Police soon found Bah at the Calverton Shopping Center, which is just a block or two away on Beltsville Drive. He had removed his clothes and climbed onto a fire truck.

A video posted on YouTube shows a man walking on the top of the ladder truck, shouting threats. He also allegedly performed “lewd acts.”

Bah initially refused to come down off the truck. When he did climb down, a Prince George’s officer shot him with a Taser stun gun to subdue Bah, police said.

The officer used the Taser because Bah refused to comply with police commands and because of his erractic behavior, which led police to believe he was high on drugs. They called it a textbook case on how and when to properly use a stun gun.

Police said Bah exhibited classic characteristics of someone who is high on PCP at the time of his arrest.

Officers recovered the gun used in the Beltsville Road shooting near the car. The driver of the car was not injured and is not considered a suspect, police said. 

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

A must see: Naked man jumps on PGFD ladder truck at Calverton, MD grocery store. Incident ends with a tasing by police.

14 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Naked man now chared with attempted murder

The crew from PGFD Truck 831 eneded up with something that wasn’t on their grocery list when they made a stop for food Wednesday at a store in Calverton, Maryland. They found a naked man on the tip of the aerial ladder. Working with PGPD, firefighters maneuvered the ladder and eventually the man came down for a meeting with the police officers. It ended with a tasing. Video above by crotti2009.

According to PGFD, the person shouted threats and performed lewd acts to himself while climbing on the ladder bed. The man was taken to an area hospital after he was tased.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Close call video: Firefighter falls trying to exit roof at Easton, PA duplex fire.

32 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

NortheastBravest.com

Click here for details & additional video from the fire

More video from last night’s fire in a duplex on Wilkes Barre Street in Easton, Pennsylvania. This one is from Dan Clerico at NortheastBravest.com. Make sure you watch closely starting at around 2:00 as a firefighter tries to exit the roof.

Here’s some of what Dan wrote about the fire:

Two minutes into the video a Easton Firefighter fell off the main roof onto onto a 2nd roof after missing the ladder rungs. The firefighter appeared to be uninjured and continued to work. Firefighters were eventually forced to evacuate the building due to conditions quickly deteriorating conditions a loss of water pressure and dead hydrants.

 

Caught on video: Collapse at house fire injures Tennessee firefighter.

2 comments

This is from a fire Tuesday in South Knox County, Tennessee.

WBIR-TV:

An East Tennessee firefighter is out of the hospital and back home recovering.

On Tuesday, Rural/Metro firefighter Brian Pratts was part of a crew battling a house fire in South Knox County. While working to remove a window, part of the home’s brick facade collapsed on top of him.

“I was laying there, pretty well stunned in that area,” Pratts remembers. “I didn’t lose consciousness but I was definitely dazed. They get me and drug me to a safe area at which time the ambulance crew was waiting to assess me and transport me to UT.”

Pratts underwent surgery Tuesday night on a broken foot. He also broke his thumb and tore several tendons in his foot. 

Must see video: Firefighter grabbed as he falls through roof during Charlotte, NC house fire.

7 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Thanks to David Bradshaw (@BOXEMOUTDAVE) for alerting STATter911.com to this video from a house fire on Thursday in Charlotte, NC.

WCNC-TV:

When crews arrived on the scene, heavy smoke and fire poured from the home that sits a block off the intersection of Eastway Drive and Independence Boulevard.

While working to contain the blaze, a fireman fell into the roof, but was quickly pulled to safety by his colleagues.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

You’ll love this: Fresno Truck 4 gives police chase play-by-play during major fire. Also, collapse at strip mall caught on video.

7 comments

More coverage from Firegeezer.com

It’s always something. A police pursuit early this morning in Fresno, California headed straiht for where Fresno firefighters were dealing with a major fire in a strip mall. Command was alerted and received reports from its eye in the sky, a firefighter at the top of Truck 4 (or, if you prefer, the “truck mounted sprayer”, as an article below calls it).

As you will see in the video above, the pursuit came close, but skirted the area around the fire on all four sides of the shopping center.

There is more exciting video from the fire itself. A structural collapse was caught on at least three different cameras. You will see that in the various TV coverage below.

Amanda Venegas, KSFN-TV:

Fresno Firefighters arrived at the Mayfair Shopping Center within minutes of smoke being reported by a passerby. The Train Depot, Super Suds Laundry, Jesse’s Seafood Market and Thai Phooket were destroyed by the fire.

Officials said the type of roofing on the building made the flames spread quickly through the entire structure. It’s estimated to be a total loss.

Early Tuesday morning, employees of The Train Depot restaurant came out to see the aftermath of the fire. The owner and employees say they were devastated to see the restaurant burn to the ground. The business has been there for more than three decades. The owner said she plans to reopen.

KPGE-TV:

The fire was already coming through the roof when firefighters arrived and spread very quickly.
 
Kris Townsend with the Fresno Fire Department said crews had to pull back and allow truck-mounted sprayers to knock down the flames for safety reasons..

Early this morning flames consumed the Train Depot, Super Suds Laundry, Jesse’s Seafood Market and a Thai restaurant. Fire crews believe the blaze began in the attic and spread quickly.

Fire crews think faulty wiring may be to blame. However, the investigation is ongoing. In the meantime, crews will remain on scene putting out any hot spots. Fire crews say all four businesses are a complete loss. Damage will cost about $1.7 million.

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Must see helmet-cam video: Rescues at apartment fire in Seaside, CA.

18 comments

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

This is helmet-cam video from Justin Hastings of a fire reported just before 11:00 AM on April 10 at 1442 Yosemite Street in Seaside, California (Monterey County). A little girl was rescued by a neighbor (seen in the video in the arms of a police officer) and her mother was rescued through a window by the first arriving firefighters. Both were taken by helicopter to a hospital in San Jose. Three others were hurt in the fire.

Dennis Taylor, The Herald of Monterey County:

Seaside Deputy Police Chief Louis Lumpkin said two other people were taken to Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula for treatment of burns, and a fifth victim refused treatment at the scene. The fire broke out about 10:50 a.m. at the Del Monte Manor apartments.

Neighbor Alexis Hunter, who called herself a family friend, said she entered the burning apartment and found the child, whom she identified as 3-year-old Kaijah Collins, lying in a hallway just inside the front door. She scooped up the child in her arms and left the building.

The child’s mother, whom Hunter identified as 35-year-old Michelle Collins, was trapped in a second-floor bedroom, calling for help but refusing to exit through the upstairs window because she didn’t know where her daughter was, witnesses said.

Firefighters helped the woman out of the window and brought her down a ladder to safety.

KION-TV:

“I saw the Mom just banging on the window and so I ran over there,” said Alexis Hunter, who lives in the complex.

Hunter said what came next was a burst of adrenaline.

“I touched the door knob to see is if it was hot,” said Hunter.

She looked inside and saw three-year-old Keasha laying on the ground, by  now a maintenance man made his way up to the apartment and together they burst inside and pulled little Keasha out.

“I took her down the  stairs and I kept talking to her, because I know the little girl since  she was a baby, I was like Keasha, pay attention look at me, she was  breathing,” said Hunter.

But Keasha was badly burned, and Keasha’s Mom was still inside. Hunter said people tried getting her out but the smoke was too thick, so  they went around got a ladder and tried getting her out from the back  window. That’s when first responders arrived and helped pull Keasha’s Mom out.

UPDATED: 3 confirmed bomb blasts in Boston. 2 near finish line of Marathon. 1 at JFK library. At least 2 dead & 23 injured. Listen to Boston FD live.

12 comments

CBS Boston Live Stream

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

My Fox Boston live

Listen Live: Boston Fire Department 

Boston Police Department Twitter

4:50 PM:

According to Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis there was a third explosion at the JFK library. No unexploded devices found. Relatives looking for victims can call 617 635 4500.  Witnesses should call 800 494 TIPS.

4:32 PM:

Boston Police Department have scheduled a press conference at 4:45 PM at the Westin Hotel. Boston Police also looking for video of the finish line.

News reports indicate there were other possible unexploded devices that the police bomb squad handled. CBS reports one unexploded device handled by bomb squad. Bombs were in trash cans.

4:07 PM:

Official word from Boston Police Department Twitter feed at 4:07 PM is that two people have died and 23 are injured after two bomb blasts at the finish line of the Boston Marathon a few seconds apart.

Boston PD began Tweeting on this at 3:40 PM about 50 minutes after the explosions occurred. Below are the intitial tweets.

 

AP: 

Boston police say there’s been a third explosion in the city, following two blasts near the finish line of the Boston Marathon that killed two people and injured many others.

Police Commissioner Edward Davis says authorities aren’t certain that the explosion at the JFK Library was related to the other blasts, but they’re treating them as if they are.

David says there are no injuries stemming from the third explosion.

He urged people to stay indoors and not congregate in large groups.

The Boston Marathon said that bombs caused the two explosions and that organizers were working with authorities to determine what happened. The Boston Police Department said two people were killed and 23 others injured.

Competitors and race volunteers were crying as they fled the chaos. Bloody spectators were being carried to the medical tent that had been set up to care for fatigued runners. Authorities went onto the course to carry away the injured while stragglers in the 26.2-mile race were rerouted away from the smoking site.

Roupen Bastajian, a 35-year-old state trooper from Greenville, R.I., had just finished the race when they put the heat blanket wrap on him and he heard the first blast.

“I started running toward the blast. And there were people all over the floor,” he said. “We started grabbing tourniquets and started tying legs. A lot of people amputated. … At least 25 to 30 people have at least one leg missing, or an ankle missing, or two legs missing.”

A Boston police officer was wheeled from the course with a leg injury that was bleeding.

There are a lot of people down,” said one man, whose bib No. 17528 identified him as Frank Deruyter of North Carolina. He was not injured, but marathon workers were carrying one woman, who did not appear to be a runner, to the medical area as blood gushed from her leg.

Smoke rose from the blasts, fluttering through the national flags lining the route of the world’s oldest and most prestigious marathon. TV helicopter footage showed blood staining the pavement in the popular shopping and tourist area known as the Back Bay.

“There are people who are really, really bloody,” said Laura McLean, a runner from Toronto, who was in the medical tent being treated for dehydration when she was pulled out to make room for victims of the explosions. “They were pulling them into the medical tent.”

Cherie Falgoust was waiting for her husband, who was running the race.

“I was expecting my husband any minute,” she said. “I don’t know what this building is … it just blew. Just a big bomb, a loud boom, and then glass everywhere. Something hit my head. I don’t know what it was. I just ducked.”

Runners who had not finished the race were diverted straight down Commonwealth Avenue and into a family meeting area, according to an emergency plan that had been in place. 

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Early video: Jumpers at hotel fire in China. 11 dead & 50 injured.

1 comment

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

 AP:

Eleven people have been killed and 50 others injured in a fire in central China that spread to a hotel.

The official Xinhua News Agency says the fire broke out just after 6:30 a.m. Sunday in Xiangyang city in Hubei province and wasn’t extinguished until almost 9 a.m.

Two Xiangyang firefighters said the fire started in an Internet cafe on the floor below the hotel in a five-story building. They refused to be identified, as is common with Chinese officials. 


One of the firefighters said the Internet cafe was on the second floor and the hotel on the three floors above.

He said the fire’s cause was under investigation.

The firefighters and Xinhua both said 11 people died and 50 were injured. Xinhua said some of the injuries were serious.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Helmet-cam: House fire in Windber, PA with evacuation ordered due to water supply issues.

29 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Video from KPaul77 aboard Truck 3-1 from the Richland Fire Department at a house fire on Tuesday afternoon at 105 11th Street in Windber, Pennsylvania (Somerset County). Here’s the description with the video: 

Truck 3-1 officer Sgt. Kyle Paul. 2nd due truck and 3rd arriving unit. Truck crew was originally assigned to open up and search for stairs leading to division 2. Due to lack of water supply crews were evacuated out until a water source was established. Truck crew entered a second time and vented division 2.

Melanie Gillespie, WJAC-TV:

“The fire was already ahead of us, which made it very hot inside; which made it more difficult for crews. So, we had to have a lot of back lines to back the other guys up,” Windber Fire Chief Aaron Cicon said.

Two firefighters were sent to the hospital for heat exhaustion and dehydration as a result of being on the roof.

“Everybody’s not used to the heat again. People went down pretty fast. It took two alarms to get enough guys here to cover, and because of where we’re at here, people aren’t too close so we had to pull from pretty far distances,” Cicon said.

The chief called the fire fast-moving and told 6News it started in the kitchen.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

A must see for fire videographers. New camera’s test run gives fascinating view of a fire.

10 comments

- First footage from the new Phantom Flex4K – “Let me know when you see Fire” from Gregory Wilson on Vimeo.

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

News producer, volunteer firefighter and STATter911.com reader Adam Bearne sent me a Tweet this morning alerting me to this video posted by cinematographer Greg Wilson. Anyone interested in videography and photography will find this test of the Phantom Flex4K Digital Cinema Camera quite interesting. Even if you are not into cameras, I think you will find this view of a fire very compelling. The video is directed by Brendan Bellomo. According to Wilson, the two were asked by Vision Research and Abel CineTech to shoot the first test footage with the camera still in its alpha prototype stage.  Here’s more from Greg Wilson on Vimeo.com:

All the live action footage was shot on March 24th, 2013. Some additional fire elements were shot on the 23rd and 25th of March with the Hebron and Glastonbury Fire Departments in Connecticut. We were thrilled with the camera’s performance at this early stage of its development and are very much looking forward to this camera as it matures prior to it’s release this fall. This is a true 4K RAW camera capable of at 1000fps at 4K resolution.

Thanks to our great crew, including lead Phantom camera technician Edward Richardson, VRI and Abel CineTech for giving us the opportunity to shoot with this amazing new camera system. For more info check out twitter.com/phantomflex4k

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

 

Pre-arrival video & fireground audio: Three occupied homes in Detroit. Report of a hydrant problem. Busy weekend in Detroit.

23 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Video above from Blake Arnold (midwestnews, International Broadcast Services) who arrived on the scene last night as neighbors were just discovering a house fire that spread to adjoining homes. Here’s a brief description Blake sent me:

The fire was on Senator near Beard street on Detroit’s southwest side. We ended up calling it in and were first on scene. Because it was very busy last night it took dfd approx 8 mins to arrive and almost 20 minutes to get water on the fire because of a broken hydrant.

Below are two parts of radio traffic via wildfirevideosWNY as Detroit firefighters handled a dozen fires during the busy night.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Must see pre-arrival video: Multiple explosions on roof of apartment building.

1 comment

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

This is one wild pre-arrival video taken Thursday in Luneville in Lorraine, France at an apartment building closed for renovations. The videographer captured five separate explosions (:10, :14, 1:34, 2:29, 2:34) from two different angles. Despite the misinformation provided with the video description, news reports indicate there were no serious injuries.

There is a good aftermath picture here from estrepublicain.fr and these details translated by Google:

Three of the six gas cylinders stored there then exploded, projecting elements of the building onto the building next door and parallel, called Mars, however, just 30 meters away! A result which had the effect of causing a second accident burning fifteen m 2 of this roof.

Eighty firefighters on the scene

Upon arrival firefighters led by Lieutenant Caudal, the roof of the first building was fully ablaze. After verifying that all tenants had indeed left the scene, the efforts of 80 men rescue centers Luneville, Blainville-Damelevières, and Nancy Gerbéviller consisted of stop and prevent flame spread to other nearby apartment buildings. A real challenge in light wind gusts. September vans, two large scales, a command vehicle, six ambulances and a support unit completed the breathing device, a material point of view. Commander Sauvageot, head of the column, the colonel sign, site manager and regional director of the SDIS (Service county fire and rescue) Colonel Beaudoux have overseen operations.


Caught on video: Jumper at apartment fire.

4 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

haberler.com:

Fatma Koçak (37) and daughter (12) who threw themselves through the fourth floor window of an apartment as a result of fire broke out in their flat in Istanbul’s Atasehir district early on Friday were seriously injured and immediately taken to hospital.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Caught on video: Two views of collapse at three-alarm Birmingham, AL building fire.

6 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

More coverage of the fire from Firegeezer.com

Video above from maw8908 of yesterday’s three-alarm fire in a vacant building at 1811 1st Avene North in Birmingham, Alabama. This video shows the partial collapse of the wall on Side D. There is a link to close-up video of the collapse below.

Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service responded to the call around 11:40 AM. There is some fairly early video below in a series of clips from maw8908 taken prior to the collapse.

Click here for a close up view of the collapse shot by Dennis Sherrod.

Jon Reed, Al.com:

Firefighters were still hosing down hot spots and keeping an eye out for flames Friday night at the scene of a fire that destroyed a building and blanketed downtown Birmingham in smoke for much of the afternoon. 

At 10 p.m., firefighters still had one truck in use to contain three hot spots in the pile of debris, a firefighter said.

The building had been the home of Action Printing and Supplies, among other businesses, but had been vacant for years. No injuries were reported.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Must see: Neighbors capture video of explosion during Pittsburgh apartment fire.

3 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Additional coverage from Firegeezer.com

Above is video by a neighbor (meanscreen) at what turned into a five-alarm fire in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh yesterday morning. At the beginning of the clip is the explosion described by residents of the building. A newspaper article calls it a backdraft but other news sites say the explosion is still under investigation. Below is another view of the blast.

Liz Navratil, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:

When smoke began pouring out of a utility closet Friday morning in the  Oakland apartment building where Charlie Koch lived, he began pounding on his  neighbors’ doors.

He grabbed a flashlight, headed toward the stairs and tried to help guide  people out of the building. They made it out moments before a backdraft caused  an explosion that sent bricks flying off of the building and onto the roof of  another complex nearby.

It was “very lucky,” Pittsburgh arson Detective Michael Burns said, that no  one was injured when the five-alarm blaze broke out in the basement ceiling of  519 Zulema St., where there appeared to be an electrical problem. Detective  Burns said he doubts charges will be filed in connection with the fire.

WTAE-TV:

Detective Mike Burns, who  works on the city’s arson squad, said there was an “electrical malfunction”  where the fire started between the basement and the first floor.  The  flames spread through the wood frame structure and two shafts that extended  through the height of the building.

The cause of the fire is  under investigation. “I have received reports that they heard a boom or an  explosion, but I can’t confirm that,” Jones said.

Chris Togneri, triblive.com:

None of the tenants in the six-unit, 15-bedroom building was injured, Pittsburgh fire Chief Darryl E. Jones said. One firefighter cut his hand but the injury was minor, Jones said.

The roof collapsed into the building’s third floor and  caused major damage, Jones said. 

Firefighters cleared apartments on the first and  second floors, then “took a defensive position,” Jones said, explaining that  they could no longer save the building and instead focused on preventing the  fire from spreading to neighboring homes.

Dayton, OH Captain Barry Cron talks about being struck on icy road. Can’t believe what he sees on dash-cam video.

5 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Previous coverage

WDTN-TV:

“By God’s grace. Obviously I had someone watching over me that morning,” was how Dayton Fire Capt. Barry Cron described surviving the injury he suffered Tuesday while responding to an accident on U.S. 35.

Cron was on the scene where a vehicle overturned in the median. While police, firefighters and medics were on the scene, icy conditions caused more vehicles to crash. Cron was struck while checking on the occupants in one of the wrecked vehicles. The impact threw him almost 30 feet.

“I can’t believe it. it’s just unbelievable,” he said about seeing the accident that was captured in cruiser cam video. He said he had about a half second warning before he was hit, and was waiting for another car to hit him as was lying on the ground, unable to move.

WHIO-TV:

A Dayton fire captain who survived a dramatic crash Tuesday on U.S. 35 said he had less than a second’s warning that he was about to be thrown through the air.

Captain Barry Cron said he was conscious the whole time and remembers a half second of tires skidding before he was tumbling. He landed on his back in the snow and immediately began to assess his own injuries.

When Cron’s ladder crew arrived on the scene just before 5:30 a.m. there were only a few cars that had slid off the icy roadway, he said. He was assessing a victim in one of the vehicles when another lost control and slammed into the pileup.

Cron told media Thursday he has three broken ribs and has a fracture in his leg and a lot of bumps and bruises.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Must see pair of dash-cam videos as ice takes toll on firefighters in OH & IN. Vehicle smashes into crash scene. Ice chunk takes out fire truck windshield.

6 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

More from FireCritic.com

We have been traveling the last couple days and are glad we haven’t had to deal with the ice issues firefighters in the Midwest encountered. Here are two incidents were firefighters were hurt and very lucky that their injuries weren’t more serious.

WDTN-TV:

A Dayton firefighter  was struck by an out of control pickup truck on icy US Highway 35 early Tuesday morning and it was all caught on a police cruiser cam.

Dayton Police released the video of the incident saying they do not plan to file any charges in the multiple vehicle accident that left the fire captain injured.

Captain Barry Cron was on the scene where a vehicle overturned in the median. Officials said icy conditions caused the driver to lose control. While police, firefighters and medics were on the scene, more vehicles began crashing. 

In the video above Dayton’s fire chief shares his reaction to the incident with WDTN-TV:

Dayton Fire Chief Herbert Redden watches as one of his own, Captain Barry Cron, is hit while responding to an accident on US 35 around 5:30 Tuesday morning.

“It looks he made an attempt here to stop the traffic and then he goes back and tries to assess the injured party.  Watch when he holds his head up, boom!” explains Chief Redden.

Chief Redden says he is very lucky, “we are blessed that our Captain wasn’t seriously injured and some of the other individuals on the scene that was there, wasn’t seriously injured.  Emergency service workers do dangerous work.  We try to do it in as safe environment as we can.”

The video above shows what it looked like after a slab of ice flew off a vehicle and hit the windshield of a Wayne Township, Indiana fire truck on Tuesday. Firefighter Matt Ervin was injured but able to bring the fire truck to a stop. Below is dash-cam video as the ice hits. Click here for an interview with Firefighter Ervin.

Tanya Spencer, Indy Channel:

“I saw a vehicle coming at us and snow and ice came off the roof and like a second later, it was in the windshield,” said Matt Ervin, who was driving the fire truck. “(The windshield) came up real close and hit me right in the forehead.”

Ervin was injured but was able to safely bring the fire truck to a stop. The driver of the pickup truck continued east on 21st Street, officials said. 

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Check this out: Scene safety or censorship? You be the judge as Miami-Dade firefighters confront videographer.

67 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Curt Varone’s view on this video at FireLawBlog.com

Yesterday, during my presentation at Maryland Fire & Rescue Institute’s Staff and Command course, there was a lively discussion (it was a very lively and enjoyable group) about the issues you will see raised in the video above. We were discussing the fact that it is somewhat of a rarity to be at a scene these days where no one is recording your actions. The issue of scene safety versus censorship came up and about the same time it was playing out live in Florida.

This involves a fly out, a videographer (MiamiImpulse) and firefighters from Miami-Dade Fire Rescue. At 3:24 into the video a firefighter and captain cross the street. The firefighter makes the cut sign with his hand across his neck asking, “Can you not videotape that please?”. MiamiImpulse replies “Why?”. The firefighter says “This is personal information.” At the same time the captain approaches, telling the guy he is leaving. As the captain makes his first request for police and tells the man to turn around and walk away, the firefighter says he is not allowed to videotape this and repeats that it is personal information. Following that, the captain shifts gears and makes it a case of scene safety. The videographer notes in text that cars were driving between him and the helicopter. He refuses to leave.

What we don’t know, of course, is if anything happened before MiamiImpulse began rolling video. It appears that this is unedited video from a camera and a smart phone.

So, is this Miami-Dade Fire Rescue policy? Is this the crew’s policy? Who is right and who is wrong? Is this really a scene safety issue or is it being used to keep the man from shooting what the firefighters don’t want him to see?

My suggestion to all reading this is that you figure this issue out before a confrontation with the public. Are you clear on the legal issues? Do you know your department’s policy? Do you understand the rights of the citizens with the camera and what they can and can’t do? Do you let your personal view of what’s proper and not proper impact your decision making?

You will only be running into more and more instances where people are shooting video of you in action. Make sure you are standing on firm ground when and if you interfere with someone taking pictures. Otherwise, it can get very ugly.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Must see video from 1998: Flashover & bailout in Buffalo.

4 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

This was uploaded to YouTube today (Sunday) by george cribbs and is quite interesting. It is a two-alarm fire at 914 Kensington Avennue in Buffalo, New York from April 26, 1998. It begins with sirens and airhorns sounding, a lot of fire on the second floor and firefighters escaping via a ladder to the window of the one room on the second floor that isn’t burning.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

Raw video from Baltimore: You’ll hate me afterwards for wasting your time, but you must see this.

37 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

This video was posted to YouTube in August of 2010, apparently shot as a group of friends headed to an Orioles game. A STATter911.com reader sent it to me. It appears to me to be taken on the upper portion of St. Paul Street south of East Mulberry Street in Downtown Baltimore. You will only see about two seconds of the burning building. It’s the rest of the video that makes this a must see. It’s a look inside one of those cars you pass as your are responding. And no, before you ask, I can’t give you back the 2:08 you will have wasted by watching this.

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

More must see video from Harrison, NJ: Another view of possible backdraft along with conditions prior to explosion.

19 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Earlier video of explosion

Video above from Andy T of yesterday’s fire in Harrison, New Jersey that injured five firefighters in an explosion described by fire officials as a backdraft. This view of the explosion (at 6:50) isn’t as dramatic, but the video provides a lot better view of the fireground prior to the explosion. There is more video from Andy T here and here.

Below is some even earlier video shot by a neighbor.

Anthony J. Machcinski, The Jersey Journal via NJ.com:

The fire, which started around 11 a.m., is believed to have started in the kitchen area of a restaurant located at 600 Frank E. Rodgers Blvd. in Harrison. According to Fire Director Harold Stahl, the fire heavily damaged two buildings, 600-602 and 604-606 Rodgers Blvd. and an adjacent residence on Davis Avenue.

Stahl said that backdraft, which is caused by a buildup of unvented gasses inside an area, could have been much more dangerous.

“I’m a career firefighter and I’ve been caught in a backdraft,” Stahl said. “I’m very grateful that the injuries weren’t more serious.”

Jersey City Fire Director Armando Roman said that the backdraft could have been prevented had the roof been vented, a process of putting holes in the roof that would allow the trapped gasses to escape. 

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.

UPDATE – Must see video: Five firefighters injured in explosion, described as backdraft, at Harrison, NJ 5-alarm fire.

34 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”)

Video above by T00LS. Video below by quake4ever2007,

UPDATE

WCBS-TV:

Five firefighters were hurt in a terrifying explosion and extra-alarm blaze in Harrison, N.J., Sunday afternoon.

.. when the fire was at its height, a dangerous backdraft was caught on video, CBS 2’s Steve Langford reported. Backdrafts are an explosive phenomenon, and they are one of the worst things that can go wrong in a firefight.

One of those badly hurt when the backdraft erupted was a battalion chief.

“When that glass blew out, he got it all in his face and his body,” said Harrison fire Capt. Robert Gillen. “He was bleeding profusely.”

WNYW-TV:

The blast sent firefighters flying into the air, said Harrison Fire Captain  Robert Gille.

“They were literally thrown out of the building by the smoke explosion.”

Five firefighters were rushed to an area hospital; two are being help for  further examination the captain said. At least one suffered bad cuts. 

EARLIER

WABC-TV:

Firefighters in Harrison, New Jersey are battling a five-alarm fire at an industrial building that has extended to adjoining buildings. 

The fire broke out Sunday on the 600 block of Frank E. Rodgers Avenue.

A number of firefighters were injured by flying debris when they were caught up in a partial backdraft explosion that blew out windows.

NJ.com:

The fire appeared to have started at 600-602 Frank E. Rodgers Blvd., a two-story building at the corner of Frank E. Rodgers Boulevard North and Davis Street. It then spread next door to 604-606 Frank E. Rodgers, a two-story residential building.

Harrison officials still have not commented on the fire.

After the explosion occurred, at least two firefighters stumbled out of the building and one of them collapsed on the ground.

EMS and other firefighters rushed to help them. They were both placed in ambulances. 
 

Follow-up: Utica firefighters honored for saving four-year-old whose rescue was caught on video.

14 comments

Click here to follow STATter911.com on Facebook (hit “like”) 

Previous Coverage of this story

Tom Eschen, CNYCentral.com:

Seven Utica firefighters and one Utica Police officer were honored on Wednesday night for rescuing a four-year-old girl from a burning building on February 22nd.

Jeff Baranowski, Brian Bova, Jessica Caulkins, Fred DeCarlo, Captain Scott Ingersoll, Marc Manno and Lt. Dominick Meyers were awarded certificates for their roles in saving Halima Haji, who lived at Adrean Terrace in east Utica.

“It happened so fast,” DeCarlo says. “When I watched [the video], I don’t remember half of it, everything crashes all in at once, you just do what you can do, what you’re trained to do.”

Do you want to sell a rig? Click HERE to find out how with SellFireTrucks.com.