Posted on 01/03/2007 7:09:24 AM PST by rface
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(CBS/AP) A quick-thinking commuter saved a teenager who apparently suffered a seizure and fell onto subway tracks in Upper Manhattan, by jumping onto the tracks himself and pushing them both between the rails, beneath the oncoming train.
Cameron Hollopeter, 19, of Littleton, Mass., fell onto the tracks at Broadways 137th Street station Tuesday. Another subway passenger, 50-year-old Wesley Autrey of Manhattan, was standing on the platform with his two daughters whom he was taking home so he could go to his construction job.
When Autrey saw Hollopeter fall, he quickly took action and left his daughters to jump on the tracks to bring the man to safety as an oncoming train approached.
"I didn't want the man's body to get run over, Autrey said. Plus, I was with my daughters and I didn't want them to see that."
Autrey jumped down onto the tracks and initially tried to pull Hollopeter up to the platform but had to decide whether he could get him up in time to avoid both of them getting hit.
"I was trying to pull him up, but his weight [was too much] plus he was fighting against me he didn't know who I was, Autrey told CBS station WCBS-TV.
Autrey said the man was still moving violently from the seizure, so he pulled him into the center of the tracks away from the high-voltage third rail and laid on top of him. "The only thing that popped up in my mind was, 'OK, well, go for the gutter,'" Autrey said. "So I dove in, I pinned him down and once the first car ran over us, my thing with him was to keep him still."
The subway trough between the rails, which is used for drainage, is typically about 12 inches deep but can be as shallow as 8 or as deep as 24, a New York City Transit spokesman said.
The train's operator saw someone on the tracks and put the emergency brakes on. Two cars of the train passed over the men with about 2 inches to spare, Autrey said before it came to a stop.
Autrey's daughters thought the train had killed their father and the teen, but were relieved to hear their father shout up from under the train that the two were fine.
Hollopeter, a student at the New York Film Academy, was taken to a hospital, where he was in stable condition with only minor injuries.
Hollopeter's stepmother, Rachel Hollopeter, said Autrey was "an angel."
"He was so heroic," she said early Wednesday in a telephone interview. "If he wasn't there, this would be a whole different call."
Onlooker Patricia Brown said Autrey, a Vietnam War veteran, "needs to be recognized as a hero." Others cheered him and hugged him outside the train station.
The incident took place around 12:45 p.m. Service on the line, which runs between the southern tip of Manhattan and the Bronx, was suspended for about 45 minutes.
I'm glad that's not my last name...
Saw the guy on TV. He is indeed a hero. I hope someone comes up with a scholarship or something for his little kids.
yeah!~!!!
Greater love hath no man...risking one's own life to save a stranger shows great depth of character!
I love this story. I could just read it over and over. What a courageous man.
Amazing.
Awesome.
A man of character, with an honest job, and two young girls, saves a man in distress by putting himself in great danger with split-second presence of mind and quick action.
Hero personified.
That guy had to have nerves of steel. God bless him.
Adds a little luster to the Human Image...... a True Hero!
He and Kerry were in Vietnam. Compare and contrast.
Three cheers!!!!!!
If this guy is really 50 years old, he's too young to have been in Vietnam. He's a hero anyway. He didn't have to do what he did. But he did it anyway.
I heard this on the radio this morning and thought I heard wrong when they said: "beneath the oncoming train". Unreal, a true hero indeed! God bless them both.
Any subway rider knows that at some stations there are grooves between the rails that are a foot deep or more - and at some stations there is no perceptible groove - just the depth of the rail itself.
The groove at this station just happened to be just deep enough to crouch in. He said on the news that he thought he could get this guy back onto the platform in time but that he was wrong.
Had the groove between the rails not happened to be rather deep, his daughters would have watched their father die and extremely gruesome death.
The fact that he is alive is sheer luck - he reacted with a big heart and an empty brain and the Lord thankfully smiled on him.
That's a good idea.
50-year-old Wesley Autrey..................Autrey, a Vietnam War veteran,
lets see.....2007 - 50 = 1957 + 18 = 1975
I hope the paper has the wrong info on his age - otherwise there is very little chance that he is actually a Vietnam War veteran.
He will be blessed by G-d.
I love this story. I could just read it over and over. What a courageous man.
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