Two police officers rescue trapped infant after horrific car crash: 'We got a baby under the vehicle!'



Two New York police officers are being hailed as heroes after dramatically rescuing a baby who was trapped underneath a vehicle.

What are the details?

Video surveillance captured the moment a mother and her young child were crossing a New York City street when an out-of-control driver swerved toward them and struck the two.

Video showed the woman and her child flying up onto the hood of the vehicle as it slammed into a what appeared to be barbershop storefront.

Body camera footage from the two officers — identified as Officer Rocco Fusco and Officer Paul Samoyedy, who were next door grabbing breakfast from a bagel shop — then showed the dramatic rescue.

In the video, one person can be heard shouting, "We got a baby under the vehicle!" as a child is heard crying and the woman, screaming.

Another person can be heard shouting, "Grab the baby, grab the baby!"

With the help of bystanders, the officers are able to lift the vehicle off the ground and grab the baby from underneath the vehicle.

The Yonkers Police Department says that the child and mother suffered "significant injuries" but are in stable condition.

Police Commissioner John Mueller added that the woman, who remains unnamed at the time of this reporting, suffered compound leg fractures, and the baby sustained a fractured skull.

What else?

On Sunday, NBC News reported that the mother and child were "doing extremely well."

Authorities arrested the driver, identified as 43-year-old David Poncurak, on DWI charges. He also faces charges of second-degree vehicular assault.

WNYW-TV reported that the vehicle came to a rest so far inside the building that it wasn't visible from a helicopter until crews extracted the vehicle and removed it from the premises via a flatbed truck.

Of the accident, Fusco said, "It's honestly a miracle that both of them survived — very strong mom and an even stronger little infant."

Yonkers Officers Rescue Mom and Baby www.youtube.com

7-year-old hero swam for an hour to get help for his father and little sister, who were stranded by dangerous currents



Authorities say that a 7-year-old Florida boy likely saved the lives of his father and his younger sister after the three were swept out and stranded in a river by dangerous currents.

What are the details?

According to a Monday CNN report, 7-year-old Chase and his father and sister were on the family's boat on the St. John's River in Jacksonville when the incident happened.

The father, Steven Poust, told WKXT-TV that the children were swimming when 4-year-old Abigail, who was wearing a life jacket, was swept away by a strong current. Chase, Steven said, immediately let go of the boat and tried to swim after his sister to keep her from drifting further down the river. He, too, became stuck, and Steven was forced to jump in to help them both.

As Steven swam toward his 4-year-old daughter, he directed Chase — who was not wearing a life jacket — to swim to shore for help.

It took the boy an entire hour to fight to shore, authorities said.

He told WKXT that he alternated floating on his back and doggie-paddling in order to preserve his strength, and when he finally reached land, he ran to a nearby home for help.

"I felt really scared," Chase told the station. "The current was going the opposite way of going to the boat and the shore so it was very hard to swim that way."

By that time, the current reportedly had dragged Steven and 4-year-old Abigail about a mile and a half to two miles away from the family's boat.

Steven said that he told both of his children that he loves them because he "wasn't sure" what the outcome would be.

"I tried to stick with both of them," he said. "I wore myself out. She drifted away from me."

Eric Prosswimmer, a spokesperson for the Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department, said during a news conference on the dramatic rescue that the department used "every resource" to assist in the rescue.

"We had every resource we could have possibly had coming quickly and we're happy to say all three have been recovered, and all three are doing well," he explained. "We couldn't ask for a better outcome."

Prosswimmer noted that neither Chase nor his father were required to wear a life vest, as the state law applies only to children aged 6 years and under for a vessel under 26 feet.

Boy swims ashore, family rescued after separated from boat www.youtube.com