Posted on 05/07/2015 3:30:51 PM PDT by nickcarraway
San Diego Police Officers Robert Carlson and Thomas McGrath responded to a 911 call of an unconscious baby.
The mother of a child whose one-year-old was saved by police officers that rushed in to provide CPR described one officer as her angel in blue.
Jessica Salas said on April 6, she dialed 911 after her husband woke her up, telling her their daughter Kendall was not breathing.
"Little by little, her lips kept getting [blue], she was losing her breathing, her lips were trying to get purple and blue," said Salas.
Her husband found the child suffering from a violent seizure for an unknown amount of time. The seizures were so bad, Kendall was unconscious and her face and lips were blue. She said she prayed to God, asking for an angel.
"I prayed, God please send anybody, anybody to help me and that's when I heard Officer Carlson say, this is police," Salas said.
Officers Robert Carlson and Thomas McGrath were close to the home when they heard the call come in over the scanner. They rushed to the scene.
The first thing you hear when you hear that call is, I just need to get there, said Carlson at a press conference Monday. Because we dont know how long the baby hasnt been breathing, we dont know what the circumstances are, like most are calls we go to.
Carlson was first to arrive at the house, and McGrath came shortly after. Inside the house, the mother was crying and the dad was cradling Kendall in his arms, McGrath said.
Neither of them knew how to render aid, so the officers stepped in when they arrived.
"I remember Officer Carlson was like, she's breathing, I can barely hear it but she's breathing, and I remember hugging the officer," Salas said.
The officer went with her to the hospital and waited for almost an hour for word that her daughter would be okay. "He told the nurse what happened and he had to stop and he cried, Salas said. He cried with the nurse because he said nothing had ever shocked him like that in his career."
What they did on April 6, Carlson said, was a part of their job.
Were definitely not heroes, Carlson said. This is what we want to do, were here to help, we want to help people. Its not anything any other person who has the tools and ability to help wouldnt do.
The officers said they plan to stay in touch with Kendall and her family throughout the years.
Id be lying if I said every time I drive past that street, I dont smile, Carlson said. I park and want to say hi.
Salas said she will not soon forget the officer. "I'm never going to forget him, Salas said. He's like our angel in blue.
Most police officers are good at heart.
Must be a hoax...it doesnt fit the narrative.
/sarc
It would seem so these days.
Cops are human...which means they arent perfect....and for every bad cop story there are hundreds of good cop stories we never hear.
Thanks for posting this.
Why not name the parents?
Odd.
Jessica Salas....clearly listed in the article.
No mention of fathers name.
Mr. Salas........
They might not be married, and he might be an illegal.
Pure speculation of course.
Ah it does say husband...I missed it...LOL
Nevermind.
“Most cops are good at heart”.
They absolutely are. I am so glad to see a story get published that reflects that. It takes a lot of dedication to be a police officer, more so every day.
What a lousy story - what, exactly, did the officer do? He did something to save the baby. Maybe it would be good for, I don’t know, people with babies, to know what, exactly he did to save the child’s life.
That aside, the officer is a hero - no blood and guts, just humanity and professionalism.
“Just.” LOL!
Great story.
(But Samantha Tatro has the writing skill of a second grade child.)
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