Good Samaritans thwart motorist's attempted kidnappings of 2 girls in broad daylight in separate incidents: Authorities



A pair of Good Samaritans thwarted a male motorist's attempted kidnappings of two girls in broad daylight in separate incidents Tuesday, authorities in Michigan said.

The Macomb County Prosecutor's Office said 23-year-old Endi Bala of Shelby Township around 1:30 p.m. "attempted to unlawfully imprison a 15-year-old girl who was walking along Clinton River Road in Clinton Township. A witness intervened, allowing the victim to escape, and the suspect fled the scene."

'As a community, we owe an immense debt of gratitude to the courageous Good Samaritans who stepped in without hesitation, risking their own safety to save these young girls,' Macomb County Prosecutor Peter J. Lucido said.

Bala allegedly grabbed the girl around her head and neck, NBC News said, citing a separate statement from the Clinton Township Police Department.

Paul Billiter — the bystander who intervened — told NBC News he was doing yard work when he saw a car pull up next to the girl and heard a male ask her if she needed a ride. Billiter added to the news network that the male grabbed the girl “like a sack of potatoes” and pulled her to the side of his car.

“I bolted toward the car because something was obviously going wrong,” Billiter recalled to NBC News, adding that he grabbed the male by the neck as he was trying to force the girl into the vehicle, which gave her time to escape. Police told the news network the victim told others about what happened, and they called 911. The suspect fled the scene in his white sedan, police added to NBC News.

Billiter told the news network a police officer about 45 minutes later told him Sterling Heights police arrested Bala in connection with another attempted kidnapping.

“It never even occurred to me that he would have went down the street and try this again,” Billiter told NBC News, adding that the whole thing makes him “sick to my stomach.”

The prosecutor's office said Bala, about an hour after the Clinton Township incident, allegedly approached a 7-year-old girl in Sterling Heights "where he forcibly took her off her bicycle, and placed her in his car, and attempted to leave the park. However, a bystander blocked Bala's vehicle, enabling the young girl to escape." Sterling Heights is about seven miles west of Clinton Township; both municipalities are a little less than an hour north of Detroit.

The girl’s aunt, Alecia Swejkoski, told NBC News she “knew exactly what he was doing” when Bala pulled up to her niece in his car and then immediately began screaming for her niece to run. Swejkoski added to the news network that after Bala snatched her niece off her bike, she and Bala both ran toward the car where Bala was trying to shove the girl inside. But Swejkoski told NBC News she “flew” through a car window where she "fought" Bala, who began driving the car back and forth to shake Swejkoski loose and prevent the girl from escaping.

A driver in another car blocked Bala’s vehicle so he couldn’t drive away, Swejkoski told the news network, which allowed her niece to open a door and run away.

Coryne Childers, the victim’s mom, said her daughter is “hanging in there pretty well” but that “she’ll never be the same.” Childers warned parents to “be aware; don’t let your children go anywhere without eyes on them."

What happened next?

Bala was charged with attempted unlawful Imprisonment and assault and battery in connection with the Clinton Township incident the prosecutor's office said, adding that he was charged with kidnapping – child enticement, reckless driving, and assault and battery in connection with the Sterling Heights incident.

In connection with the Clinton Township incident, a judge set Bala's bond at $2 million cash, the prosecutor's office said, adding that if released Bala must wear a steel cuff tether, be on home confinement, have no contact with the victims or anyone under the age of 18, and have no weapons. In connection with the Sterling Heights incident, a judge denied Bala's bond and remanded him to the Macomb County Jail.

“As a community, we owe an immense debt of gratitude to the courageous Good Samaritans who stepped in without hesitation, risking their own safety to save these young girls," Macomb County Prosecutor Peter J. Lucido said. "Their quick actions not only thwarted a crime but also ensured that these brave girls were able to return home safely. We will do everything in our power to ensure that the individual responsible for this terrifying act faces justice."

You can view an NBC News video report here showing a surveillance clip of one of the alleged attempted kidnappings and interviews with witnesses.

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Blaze News original: 10 inspiring examples of Good Samaritans who ran toward danger to help others, often defeating bad guys



Blaze News last month reported on an entire family of taekwondo black belts who rushed to a business next door to their Houston studio after hearing screams and rescued a female from an attempted sexual assault.

Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez hailed the heroic act on X, calling the family of five a "group of good samaritans" [sic].

'I was just yelling, "F your gun!" and I was just hitting him in his ribs. It was great. You know, America stuff.'

The family consists of Grandmaster Han An — the dad — as well as Hong An — the mom — and siblings Hannah An, 22, Simon An, 20, and Christian An, 18, KHOU-TV reported. They all hold at least fourth-degree black belts in taekwondo, with their dad boasting an eighth-degree black belt.

Simon An told the station his family members were coming back from lunch around 4 p.m. when they heard screaming coming from the Cricket Wireless store, which is located near their training center in the Cypress area.

Hannah An told KHOU that when they opened the doors, she "saw a man on top of a woman, and the woman was on the ground." Simon An told NBC News the attacker's hands were “in [in]appropriate places” as the female tried to fend him off.

Grandmaster An immediately took down the male suspect, KHOU said, adding that Simon An and Christian An stepped up as well. Simon An told NBC News that "the intruder was trying to run away — scratching, biting, anything he could do," but Grandmaster An held down the attacker for 10 minutes until law enforcement arrived.

Gonzalez told KHOU that 19-year-old Alex Robinson was arrested and charged with attempted sexual assault, unlawful detention, and assault on the instructors. You can view KHOU's interview with members of the An family here.

Ah, Good Samaritans. The ones who go out of their way to help others, often putting themselves in danger in the process.

The following are 10 other examples of Good Samaritans who ran toward life-threatening situations in order to help others — and a number of them physically defeated the bad guys.

UFC fighter takes down shooting suspect in restaurant, puts him to sleep using choke hold


UFC fighter Kevin Holland took down an armed male at a Houston restaurant on March 16, 2022, Yahoo! Sports reported. A suspect identified as 24-year-old Jesus Samaniego allegedly pulled out a gun and fired at least one shot near the bar area of Ra Sushi in Highland Village around 11:30 p.m., according to reports.

Holland indicated that he used a rear naked choke to subdue the suspect but didn't even realize at first that shots had been fired, ESPN said: "I was facing one way, and then we he heard a big, loud bang. I thought it was a champagne bottle popping because the people behind us were having a birthday party. I go to look around, and I see people running, like they had the look of death on [their] face[s], like super worried."

He said that he and a friend initially took cover but saw the gunman — who reportedly was waving a pistol at several patrons — out of the corner of his eye, and then Holland jumped into action. ESPN reported that Holland "took the man into his lap, wrapped his legs around his legs, and put him in a rear naked choke submission hold."

"As soon as he was [asleep], I let go of the choke, slid out on top, got full mount, stretched the arms out so he couldn't reach for anything," Holland added.

The suspect was taken into custody without incident and faced charges of deadly conduct and unlawfully carrying a weapon.

Holland wasn't a stranger to such acts — the previous October he chased down and detained a carjacking suspect until police arrived.

Good Samaritan jumps in to help cop who's struggling with suspect who grabbed for gun


The Brea Police Department in southern California said a foot pursuit followed a routine traffic stop over an obstructed license plate in the city of La Habra on Feb. 2, 2022. Police bodycam video KTLA-TV obtained shows an officer — an ex-football player — running after and finally catching up to the driver.

"They're wrestling. The officer has his gun on his right side. And you can see the suspect's trying to grab for his holster there," Lieut. Chris Harvey told KTLA.

"In fact, he grabbed so violently that he broke the bolts that hold the handgun to the side rig the officer was wearing," Harvey added to the station while noting the suspect called to a woman who had been a passenger in the car to help him get the officer's gun.

That's when an unknown man in a cowboy hat stepped in. Video — which you view here — shows him helping the officer until another officer arrives. Harvey said the man left before police could get his name.

"It may sound extreme to say the officer was fighting for his life, but under the circumstances, you have to consider what is the suspect's intention in grabbing the officer's gun," Harvey told KTLA, adding "so yeah, that is absolutely a fight for your life."

Police said they want to find the Good Samaritan to thank him and ask him to be a witness in the case. Later police in an update said the man came forward but didn't want any public or media attention.

After 3 males carjack motorist at gunpoint, Good Samaritan gives victim some surprising assistance — and all suspects are caught


After three males carjacked a motorist at gunpoint in Memphis on Aug. 13, 2023, a Good Samaritan gave the victim some surprising assistance, after which authorities captured all three suspects.

Memphis police told Blaze News the victim was carjacked around 6 p.m. in the 5300 block of Knight Arnold Road. WREG-TV said the victim was sitting in his 2012 Dodge Charger when three individuals approached him. One of the males, later identified as Zakee Brinkley, pointed a gun at the victim and demanded his vehicle, the station said, citing reports. The victim got out of the car, and the suspects drove off, WREG said.

Then came a big surprise. Police said the victim flagged down a stranger and got in the stranger's car. They followed the victim's Charger, and the victim called police and told them the direction in which they were headed, the station said.

While officers located the vehicle and tried to stop it, the driver refused to pull over, WREG said. Soon the vehicle crashed in the 1700 block of Lochearn Road, and the three suspects fled, the station said. Brinkley, the front passenger, was caught and taken into custody, WREG said, adding that police found a 9mm gun on him.

Police added to Blaze News that the two other suspects were taken into custody around the same time Brinkley was caught, but they're both 17 years of age — minors — so they aren't being named, and there's no information regarding whether they're still in custody. Police told Blaze News the two minor suspects were charged with carjacking.

As for Brinkley, WREG said he's charged with carjacking, employing a firearm with intent to commit a felony, and evading arrest. Jail records indicate that Brinkley posted a $50,000 bond Aug. 14.

Ex-MMA fighter chokes out wanted felon who violently attacked police officer


William Cassoday, 39, and his wife were on their way to visit his mother on May 16, 2022, in Portage, Indiana, to show her their new car — and he saw a male punching a Porter County sheriff's patrolman in the face.

Cassoday — an ex-MMA fighter and a Brazilian jiu-jitsu trainer who was working on getting his black belt — stopped to help and took down the culprit with ease.

"I’m 280 pounds," Cassoday told WMAQ-TV. "This guy was probably half my size."

The station said Cassoday put his arm around the male's neck from behind and used his other arm to tighten the grip in a rear naked choke: “He couldn’t do anything because I was squeezing on his neck, and then he kinda felt like he went limp for a second, and so I loosen[ed] it up."

Cassoday's wife, Marisa McDaniel, told WMAQ, "Not a lot of people would have done that. He was very courageous. He didn’t have to think twice; he did what he had to do."

Cassoday pinned the man within 15 seconds, and the police officer recovered to handcuff the suspect, whom the sheriff's office identified as 37-year-old Christopher Delgado, WMAQ said.

Patrolman Jamison Smith noticed Delgado walking down the street and stopped him for an outstanding warrant for auto theft, the station said, adding that Delgado allegedly attacked Smith during the confrontation, leaving him with swelling above his right eye from a punch.

Delgado was charged with battery, resisting arrest, and providing false information to police, WMAQ said.

Law enforcement officials said they "cannot thank Mr. William Cassoday enough for his courageous actions," the station reported.

“Putting his own safety aside, he ran into harm’s way, assisting Officer Smith in taking a felon into custody,” Porter County Sheriff’s Office Cpl. Benjamin McFalls told the Lake Geneva Regional News.

“Mr. Cassoday willingly jumped into a fight, in which our officer was being violently attacked,” McFalls added. “Mr. Cassoday exemplified what it means to be a resident of Porter County. We will be honoring him in the near future."

Heroic dads speak out after tackling suspected shooter at Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl parade, repeatedly punching him 


After at least one armed thug opened fire at the Super Bowl parade for the Kansas City Chiefs on Feb. 14, a pair of dads ran down the alleged gunman, tackled him, and began punching him.

Trey Filter and Paul Contreras, previously unknown to one another, both stressed that inaction was never an option: "It was just: Just do it."

Filter was with his wife and two sons when gunshots rang out, after which someone yelled, "Get him!" he told the New York Post.

"My brain tells me, 'That must be him,'" recalled Filter. "I literally remember when I was tackling him, 'I sure hope this is who they were yelling at me to get.' Because I just went, 'Boom!' ... I really don't recall seeing him coming." Although Filter managed to leap onto the alleged shooter and bring him to the ground, the suspected gunman managed to wiggle free.

KETV-TV reported that Paul Contreras of Bellevue, Nebraska, was with his three daughters when they heard what they figured to be fireworks. However, when it became clear that it was gunfire — and that the alleged shooter was on the loose — his parental instincts went into high gear.

Contreras reportedly spotted another man chasing down a suspect and yelling for someone to assist. "I didn't think about it," Contreras told KETV. "It's just a reaction. I didn't hesitate. It was just: Just do it."

"So I went to go tackle him and another gentleman did the same thing," Contreras continued. "And as I'm tackling him, I see his weapon either fall out of his hand or out of his sleeve, 'cause he was wearing a long jacket."

Filter's wife, Casey, lunged for the weapon after it hit the ground and tried to secure it, reported the Post.

"So when I see that hit the ground, I'm like, 'Oh, you know. We gotta take this guy down,'" added Contreras.

The Nebraska dad said that he and the other Good Samaritan held the suspect down for what "seemed like forever, but it probably ... was like 30 seconds" until police arrived. When Filter saw Contreras wrestling with the suspected gunman in the dirt, he leaped back into action and began punching the suspect.

"I don't know if I knocked him out when I tackled him or what, but I had him squeezed so hard he might have been passed out all the time for all I know. I just started racking him in his ribs," Filter told the Post. "I was just yelling, 'F your gun!' and I was just hitting him in his ribs. It was great. You know, America stuff."

Contreras reportedly punched the alleged gunman's face: "The whole time he's fighting to get up and run away. ... We're fighting to keep him down, and he's fighting to get up."

After police made the arrest and nearby witnesses applauded the dads' efforts, Filter told his boys, "Get your mother, we're getting the f*** out of here."

Martial arts coach saves the day when male tries to snatch baby from stroller right in front of screaming mother


Brian Kemsley was walking with his girlfriend on Nov. 9, 2020, near New York City's Madison Square Park when he saw a male trying to grab a baby from a stroller, WPIX-TV reported. Kemsley, a 33-year-old Muay Thai coach, immediately put his skills to use, the New York Post reported.

He told WPIX the assailant was asked to let go of the stroller but kept reaching for the baby; the mother was holding a toddler, both of whom were screaming, as was the growing crowd around them.

Cellphone video shows Kemsley tackling the male, the Post said. Kemsley pinned him and waited for authorities to arrive, WPIX reported. You can view a video report about the incident — which includes the cellphone clip — here.

"It's not a matter of stepping in; it's a matter of duty, when you see a woman and her child screaming," Kemsely told WPIX.

New York City police told the paper they responded to the park around 3:35 p.m. for a report of an emotionally disturbed person who was taken into custody and to Bellevue hospital for psychiatric evaluation.

Kemsley told the Post that the perpetrator — who kept trying to fight — seemed unwell mentally; at one point while being pinned, the male appeared to believe he was speaking to former President Barack Obama in the Oval Office.

When it was all over, "everyone started clapping, everyone was grateful," Kemsley added to the Post, noting that it "was a very nice moment."

Bystanders tackle, hold down thief who tried to steal laptop from woman at cafe


San Francisco residents — likely fed up with rampant crime in the city — took action when a male allegedly tried to steal an expensive laptop from a woman at Sana'a Cafe on May 11. Video — which you can view here as part of a report on the incident — showed one man tackle the suspect, after which others jump in to help.

Citizen journalist "Frisco Live 415" interviewed the man who made the tackle: Henry Flynn, who has trained as a security guard.

"Luckily, within seconds, everyone ran outside, so I just told people to pick — someone on one leg, someone on another leg, and hold his arms as well — just so he could stop trying to fight and hit me, and that we could control him until the cops got here," Flynn said.

The alleged thief reportedly was identified as 19-year-old Zachary Morris-Dadzie of Suisun City; he was charged with grand theft and second-degree burglary.

Some are calling Flynn a hero, but he told KRON-TV that he doesn't feel that way: “Most people want to do the right thing. It just takes one person to really get ahead of it and everyone else will follow."

Flynn — a 48-year-old, fourth-generation San Franciscan — also is running for mayor as a grassroots candidate: “I see myself representing the silenced majority of the city — the working class, the bread and butter of the city. I think what we need right now is the same thing that happened at that cafe where everyone came together."

'I knew what I had to do, and I just did it': Customer shot while wrestling gun from armed robber in Circle K


Dalton Wheeler was in the middle of his pre-work routine on July 21, 2023 — buying a Red Bull from the Circle K on Cherry Road in Rock Hill, South Carolina, and catching up with the clerk, Miss Kathy, WBTV-TV said.

Wheeler said he was outside the store when he noticed a suspicious-looking male heading inside, WBTV said, citing Rock Hill police. “I see the guy come around the corner in all black — black hoodie and a black face mask,” Wheeler recounted to WSOC-TV.

That individual, identified as 18-year-old Richard Stayberg, was at the register, where the clerk was retrieving money to hand over to him, officers told WBTV. So Wheeler headed back inside the store. "I wasn't fearful, I wasn't scared — I was ready," he told WBTV.

“I just walked up to him like I’m going to get behind him in line and buy what I’m going to buy, and then I just clothesline him,” Wheeler told WSOC. “I get him on the ground, and then I turn around and look at [the clerk] and I said, ‘Did I do the right thing?’ And she’s like ‘yes,’ and immediately emotions just dropped.”

Police added to WSOC that the suspect pulled a gun from his waistband, and as the pair fought over the weapon, Wheeler was shot twice. Police told WBTV Wheeler was found with wounds to his hand and buttocks.

“I knew what I had to do, and I just did it,” Wheeler added to WBTV.

Stayberg left the store, but officers soon found him nearby, WBTV reported, adding that he was charged with armed robbery, assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature, and possession of a weapon during a violent crime.

“I didn’t even break a bone in my hand," Wheeler told WSOC of his wound there. "I was shot with a very high-caliber pistol. My hand should be shattered and gone, but it has full function.” You can view a video report about the incident here.

Good Samaritan climbs into horrific school bus wreckage, stays with injured driver until help arrives: 'What's amazing is that I was late today. Tell me why?'


A Good Samaritan was captured on video climbing into horrific school bus wreckage — the driver slammed into a pole after dropping off all students in the Pittsburgh area on the morning of Oct. 19, 2022 — and staying with the injured driver until rescue crews arrived. You can view a video report about the incident here.

Kenny Ferree, the man who rushed to the accident scene to help the driver, posed a question to KDKA-TV with otherworldly implications: "What's amazing is I was running late today. Tell me why?"

Ferree told WPXI-TV he was driving down Ardmore Boulevard in Forest Hills with his wife when they heard a loud boom and saw yellow debris flying through the air: “I saw the windshield, the front hood assembly, the front axle, just rolling down the street, this big plume of smoke. It was a school bus.”

With that, Ferree pulled into a Taco Bell parking lot and ran to the bus, which was wrapped around a steel post underneath a Forest Hills sign, WPXI noted. “When you looked over, you could not believe that anything or anybody was left,” Ferree added to WPXI. “It disintegrated.”

Ferree noted to KDKA that the driver "looked like he was still conscious, just kind of shaken up. I crawled up into the wreckage, the closest I could get to him. His head was bleeding. ... I took my shirt off, and I wrapped my shirt around his head and put his head back, and I held him."

He also spoke to the driver for the next several minutes until paramedics arrived, WPXI reported: “I asked him, ‘Are you empty?' And he said, ‘I’m empty.’ He kept saying, ‘I’m empty.’ There were no kids. You could see. [The bus] was split like a banana.”

Ferree added to WPXI, "I told him my name. He told me his name. We had a little conversation. He wasn't sure what was going on."

Allegheny County police said the driver was trapped in the bus, and first responders had to extricate him from it. Police added that the driver was taken to an area hospital in stable condition, and no students were on the bus at the time of the collision. WXPI said it took crews about 30 minutes to pull the driver from the wreckage.

Ex-con drags wounded cop out of line of fire amid lethal shootout: 'I've got you!'


John Phillip Lally was driving to work around 10 a.m. Nov. 11, 2023, when he said he encountered what seemed to be a car accident and jumped out of his truck to help anyone who might be injured. Instead, he landed in the middle of a gun battle.

Lally, 40, told KRIV-TV he heard "gunshots going off. Then I looked to my left and saw that cop get shot."

Police said Officer J. Gibson earlier tried to pull over a suspect in a stolen vehicle, but the suspect drove off, and Gibson gave chase, the station said. The suspect crashed into several cars on Highway 59 before Gibson approached the suspect's vehicle on foot, giving him commands, the station said. The suspect instead fired at Gibson and shot him in the leg, the station said.

"That's when I grabbed that cop by his vest and dragged him all the way back to my work truck," Lally told the station, which added that Lally stayed with Gibson while other officers applied a tourniquet to his leg. You can view a video report about the incident here; it includes an interview with Lally along with clips showing how he helped the officer.

"I've been to jail a million times, bro!" Lally told Gibson, according to the video, "And I love cops dearly, bro! You're gonna be all right."

Police said the suspect got into another car and tried to get away, but police shot him numerous times, after which he died at a hospital. Investigators said the suspect was involved in a carjacking incident.

"A truly reformed individual is a person that we can use," Houston Police Dept. Chief Troy Finner said of Lally. "He stepped up."

In an interview with "Inside Edition," Lally admitted to having numerous run-ins with law enforcement but said he had turned his life around: "It sucks that people got injured and even the man who caused the whole thing lost his life, but I think a higher power knows what they're doing. If y'all see somebody that you can help, help them. That's the main moral of the story."

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Blaze News original: 10 times heroic bystanders stepped up despite the dangers and put a stop to violent crimes



Blaze News just days ago published a rundown of "10 times bystanders failed to help victims of brutal violence — and often recorded video instead."

It's rough reading through that list — which is just a small sample of instances when people ignored violent crooks victimizing others right in front of them. Indeed, often bystanders and witnesses to crime don't feel safe or equipped to help crime victims — and there can be dire consequences for people who decide to step up.

'Thank you so much for helping me when I needed help. ... Your mama raised a good boy.'

But when bystanders do get involved to help those getting violently attacked, particularly when their efforts are successful, it's inspiring.

So here are 10 times when heroic bystanders stepped up despite the dangers and put a stop to violent crimes happening right in front of them:

Sheriff's bodycam video shows citizens rescuing deputy under attack during traffic stop and subduing suspect


Volusia (Florida) Sheriff's Deputy Anthony Zimmerer pulled over a motorist who reportedly cut across all lanes of traffic on May 18, 2021. Bodycam video captured the moment Zimmerer stopped the suspect, 41-year-old Frank Padilla Velez, and tried to speak with him. Velez reportedly resisted when the deputy tried to handcuff him, a struggle ensued, and the suspect elbowed the deputy in the head. Two civilians jumped in to help and subdued the suspect; one of the Good Samaritans suffered a gash on the side of his head.

A sheriff's office Facebook post praised "the two outstanding citizens who stopped to help," and Sheriff Mike Chitwood said both of them would be receiving citizen's awards "in recognition of their actions." Chitwood added, "All my respect and gratitude goes out to these two men who took action when they saw a deputy under attack. It makes me proud to know that in Volusia County, our residents still have our deputies' backs.'"

The sheriff's office said the suspect was charged with resisting an officer with violence, battery on a law enforcement officer, driving with a suspended license, careless driving, and expired registration.

Great-grandmother, 76, pulls out her cane, scares away thug who tried to steal elderly neighbor's purse. 'Fear never crossed my mind,' Miss Faye declares.


Miss Faye told KGO-TV she saw what she thought was a rideshare vehicle coming down her Oakland street on Oct. 12, 2022, after which a male exited the car and attacked her neighbor, who is in her late 70s. Ring video from Miss Faye's home — which you can view here — shows the crook pulling on her neighbor's purse as the elderly victim is on her back in the street, hanging on to her property and screaming.

With that, Miss Faye is seen moving as fast as she can out her front door with her cane in hand — and she managed to scare away the thug, who dropped the purse. Miss Faye even chucked her cane at the vehicle as it drove off.

"Fear never crossed my mind — 'cause I'm crazy, I guess," she told KGO with a chuckle. "I don't know. It's just something that's in my nature. I do things, and it doesn't bother me until a couple hours later. That's how I've always been."

And here's a cool update: Miss Faye — whose last name is Taylor — announced in April that she's running for Oakland City Council, KGO noted in a follow-up story. The election takes place in November.

"There's so much crime! But the police station is a block away. It's just that they're not scared — they have no fear," she told the station. "None of these kids have anything to fall back on, a trade to fall back on. I'd love to give teachers a bonus because they're having a hard time with these kids because they have no discipline."

Shoppers take matters into their own hands when male allegedly tries to rape woman in Walmart aisle


Police said a woman was shopping in a northwest Miami Walmart on the evening of March 20, 2022, when 28-year-old Bredan Jarmal Harvey approached her from behind, pulled up her dress, and grabbed her. The suspect allegedly pushed the woman to the floor and "ripped off her underwear while grabbing her thighs and vagina" in the middle of the aisle, according to the arrest report. The victim screamed for help, and shoppers acted quickly, removing Harvey from the victim and subduing him until police arrived and arrested him. You can view video of shoppers subduing the suspect here. Police charged Harvey with attempted sexual battery, and he was being held on $50,000 bond, according to WTJV-TV. Miami-Dade County Court records indicated that Harvey was out on felony bond at the time of the assault for crimes that allegedly occurred one week before the Walmart attack. He also was on probation for a previous disorderly conduct conviction, Law & Crime noted.

Male attempts to kidnap 8-year-old boy right in front of his dad — but suspect doesn't get far, thanks to numerous bystanders who helped chase and restrain him


On March 27, Adrian Villanueva saw a male come up behind his 8-year-old son on a sidewalk in Ocean Beach, California — a San Diego neighborhood — and seemingly try to abduct the boy. It was all caught on surveillance video, which you can view here.

The alleged kidnapper reportedly told Villanueva, "This my son, this is my son," but Villanueva told KMFB-TV, "I pushed him. I said, 'No, he is not your son,' and then I tried to get him out. And that’s when he grabbed my kid, and he started running away through the street."

Good Samaritans and security guards from nearby bars helped thwart the kidnapping attempt and restrained the suspect until police arrived to arrest him. Police said Christopher Higginbotham, 38, was charged with false imprisonment and battery. Citing jail records, KMFB reported that Higginbotham is a wanted fugitive with a "history of felony convictions involving assault with a deadly weapon." Superior Court Judge Dwayne Moring on May 8 sentenced Higginbotham to two years in prison for false imprisonment of a child, KUSI-TV reported.

15-year-old ROTC hero sprints across parking lot, tackles thug who was attacking 65-year-old woman: 'It's just the right thing to do'


Billie Richert was physically attacked outside a Publix supermarket in Riverview, Florida, on Dec. 4, 2023, and later told WTVT-TV her assailant "told me to give him my keys, and I said no and turned away from him, and he was still all over me." Surveillance video — which you can view here — shows the suspect throwing Richert to the ground — and that's when 15-year-old Andrew jumped into action.

"I started chasing after him, and he turned around and tried to fight me," Andrew, a sophomore at Riverview High School, recounted to WTVT, adding that the suspect "was trying to grab my neck and grab my chain, and so I just kind of held him on the ground."

The station added that another hero named Dan, a former Green Beret, helped Andrew subdue the suspect until police arrived

"I mean that could be someone's mom, someone's aunt," Andrew added to WTVT. "Like, if that was my mom, and someone did that to my mom, and he got away, that's just, like, that's terrible."

The origin of Andrew's heroics? "I think it's just the way that I was raised," he told WTVT, "Just doing the right thing. Like, my parents had a huge impact and so did my friends."

Richert wasn’t injured and was in Virginia with family for Christmas when she learned about Andrew, the station said, adding that officials from his school arranged a FaceTime meeting so she could thank her teenage hero. "Thank you so much for helping me when I needed help," Richert told Andrew, adding that "your mama raised a good boy."

Robert Moore, 42, was arrested in connection with the incident and charged with robbery by sudden snatching, battery on a victim over 65, and battery, WTVT reported. Hillsborough County Sheriff Chad Chronister said that "the swift actions of these Good Samaritans echo the strength and unity of our tight-knit community."

Bystanders rush over to help as homeless man physically attacks female police officer: 'He had a death grip on her'


Four bystanders came to the aid of a female police officer who was the victim of a homeless man's physical attack in San Francisco's Chinatown, and it was all caught on surveillance video — which you can view here. The attack took place on May 28, 2021, after the officer approached the suspect, who allegedly made racially charged threats against people in the area. The suspect appeared to follow her commands before turning around and attacking her. They both fell to the ground, and several bystanders rushed over to help the officer, after which other officers eventually arrived to arrest the man. One of the men who assisted the officer spoke to reporters about the incident.

"He had a death grip on her," Michael Waldorf — one of the men who came to the officer's aid — told ABC News. "He was holding on very tightly to her, squeezing her, squeezing her head and pulling her hair."

Police said they were investigating whether hate crime charges would apply to the attack against the officer, who is Asian. The officer was taken to a hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, including a bloody nose. Surveillance video captured an attack a few days later against an Asian-American woman in Chinatown in New York City.

Portland man knocks out active shooter who fired 29 shots, hogties him until police arrive


Luke Stolarzyk launched into a heated argument with his neighbor at the Stephens Creek Crossing apartments over a barking dog around 1:15 a.m. June 29, 2021, according to the Oregonian. Stolarzyk allegedly left the confrontation — only to return with an AR-15 rifle.

Stolarzyk, who was "visibly intoxicated," fired nearly 30 rounds indiscriminately into the southwest Portland apartment building, court documents said. Resident Peroz Khoshnaw said she was on her knees praying after the gunshots rang out; several bullets shattered her windows.

But neighbor John Dickson snuck up on the gunman from behind and hit him with a stick, KATU-TV reported. Dickson wrestled the gun away from Stolarzyk and punched the suspect until he was knocked unconscious.

Court documents said Dickson kneed the rifle out of Stolarzyk's hands, then took away the gun from the shooter before handing it to a bystander, who dismantled the weapon. The neighbors then hog-tied Stolarzyk until police arrived. The arrest warrant said responding officers arrived to find "several people standing around the defendant, who was hogtied and had been beaten up."

Stolarzyk was charged with second-degree attempted murder, four counts of unlawful use of a weapon, second-degree attempted assault, first-degree attempted assault, and 10 counts of recklessly endangering another person, according to KPTV-TV. Stolarzyk's bail was set at $320,000.

KOIN-TV reported in May 2022 that Stolarzyk was sentenced to eight years and four months in prison. He pleaded guilty a month prior to three counts of criminal mischief, two counts of unlawful use of a weapon, and two counts of recklessly endangering another person, the station said, adding that the remaining charges — including one count of attempted murder — were dismissed.

Business owner chases down, tackles homeless male who sucker-punched, robbed elderly victim 


Surveillance video reportedly from Aug. 1, 2022, shows a Hollywood business owner running down a homeless male who sucker-punched an elderly man and stole his personal items. "I took him down and just waited there until the police arrived," Tim Ratcliff told KTTV-TV. Video showed the reportedly homeless man walk into a restaurant and suddenly attack a man, after which the assailant runs off with the victim's phone and wallet. Ratcliff then comes into the video frame, chases after the man, then tackles him on the corner of La Brea Avenue and Hollywood Boulevard. Ratcliff said the suspect punched him in the face, but he was otherwise unhurt and held the suspect down until police arrived, the station said.

Ratcliff told KTTV one the officers told him they're tired of seeing so many homeless attacks: "A lot of people like myself are tired of this type of thing happening. We're seeing more and more people just not putting up with it and taking it into their own hands." As for intervening in crime in the future, Ratcliff added to the station that he'd "happily do it again."

Good Samaritan yanks gun from hooded motorcycle rider trying to rob limping man hollering, 'Help!' on NYC sidewalk


The New York Post reported that two suspects on a motorcycle were chasing a 28-year-old pedestrian before cornering the victim around 4:45 p.m. on Aug. 27, 2022. You can view video of the incident on Instagram.

The victim was limping before the crooks caught up to him, video showed. One suspect wearing a blue hoodie was holding a gun in his left hand as he grabbed the victim, the Post said, adding that the suspect punched the victim and appeared to try to grab something off his neck. The victim screamed “help!” six times, video showed. Police said the suspect fired at the victim but missed, the Post reported.

Video then showed the Good Samaritan running toward the scene from behind and going right for the suspect's gun, after which the gunman punched the Good Samaritan in the head, the paper said. But the Good Samaritan managed to pull the crook from the motorcycle and eventually wrestled the gun from his hands, the Post said. The suspect was able to get back on the motorcycle before the other crook — dressed in a dark hoodie — drove the duo away from the scene as the Good Samaritan gave chase to no avail.

The Post reported that the victim suffered minor injuries, and emergency medical personnel took him to a local hospital. No arrests were made at the time, the paper added.

Residents come to the rescue when small boy screams that a thug had kidnapped and was sexually assaulting him: Police


Residents of a Houston neighborhood were hailed as heroes for jumping into action when they heard a small boy yelling about an alleged kidnapping. The 11-year-old told KTRK-TV he was doing laundry at his apartment complex on June 14, 2022, when a man approached him and asked to borrow his laundry card. The boy said he went to ask his mother for permission. "She said yes because she was trying to help someone, you know?" the boy's sister said.

But the suspect allegedly pushed the boy into his car and threatened him with a gun. "He said 'obey me, or else you will get killed,'" the boy — who suffered scratches on his face and arm during the altercation — recalled.

"He grabbed my hands and tried to grab my phone, and put it somewhere else, but he forgot my hands were free," the boy continued. "So I tried to open the lock, I opened it, and I opened the door. ... I went outside and called for help."

That's when neighbors came running. Video shows them grabbing the suspect and holding him down until police arrived. At one point, a woman slaps him. Police identified the suspect as 30-year-old Miguel Angel Cordero Ramirez, and he was charged with aggravated kidnapping and jailed on a $250,000 bond.

The victim said he wanted to be a police officer, and he's more eager than ever to follow his dream now, in light of the harrowing incident. Of the suspect, the victim said, "I want him to stay in jail forever and never do this again."

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​Lawyer points gun at ex-girlfriend bartender, fires shot that barely misses, cops say — then two heroic customers step up in a big way to end lethal threat



Police say an attorney walked into an Austin, Texas, pub over the weekend, pointed a gun at his bartending ex-girlfriend, and fired a shot that barely missed her.

With that, a pair of customers stepped up heroically, tackling the gunman and ending the lethal threat.

What are the details?

Gavin Edward Rush, 41, entered the Anderson Mill Pub after 11:30 a.m. Saturday to confront his ex-girlfriend as she worked her shift, KEYE-TV reported, citing an arrest affidavit.

Their three-year relationship ended about a month and a half before, KTBC-TV reported, adding that when she rejected his desire to get back together, police said he sent several texts threatening to harm her and her new partner.

Police added that when she stopped answering Rush's texts — though informing him she was at work — he took a trip to the pub, KTBC said.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @mkelly007

When she refused to talk to him, Rush pulled out a gun and pointed it at her — and a red dot from a laser sight was centered on her chest, KEYE said, citing the police affidavit.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @mkelly007

KTBC said he fired a shot that narrowly missed her. The police affidavit indicates that one of the shots hit a bar mirror directly behind where Rush’s ex-girlfriend was standing, KEYE reported.

Two customers who knew the backstory tackled Rush and wrestled the firearm away, KTBC said, adding that he continued to shoot the gun during the struggle and tried to kill himself.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @mkelly007

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @mkelly007

"It's hard to tell your story. In her case, it did work out that she was able to find some trusted people who did end up potentially saving her life," Nikhita Ved, vice president of community services at the SAFE Alliance, told KTBC.

Austin Councilmember Mackenzie Kelly posted surveillance video of the incident:

\u201cEarlier this week there was a shooting at a local bar in my district. This attorney belongs behind bars, pending a lengthy jury of his peers. I\u2019m deeply disturbed watching this video and committed to a safe city.\u201d
— Mackenzie Kelly (@Mackenzie Kelly) 1669677025

What happened next?

Rush is facing a felony charge of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon involving family violence, KEYE said, adding that the bond was set at $40,000, which typically means the suspect pays 10% — in this case, $4,000.

Indeed, Rush has already bonded out of jail, KTBC said, adding that Thomas Villareal — who heads up the Austin Police Association — stated that "the courts have failed this victim."

The judge did grant the ex-girlfriend an emergency protection order, KEYE said.

KTBC said Rush's law firm issued the following statement: "Gavin Rush no longer works at the firm. We do not tolerate hatred or violence of any kind. Our thoughts are with the victims who experienced a significant trauma that day."

Check out refreshing surprise in video of yet another physical attack in front of crowd of bystanders



A refreshing surprise was seen in yet another video of a physical attack taking place in front of a crowd of bystanders — a couple of men actually intervened and held the suspect until police arrived.

What are the details?

Surveillance video inside a Thai restaurant in Berkeley, California — the owner asked KGO-TV to not name it — shows a man at the bottom of the screen who had asked for free food around 5:15 p.m. Wednesday.

When the man was told no, the restaurant owner told KGO her nephew went over to see what was wrong.

With that, the man is seen knocking the nephew over a table to the floor and kicking him multiple times.

Image source: KGO-TV video screenshot

But the attacker didn't get a chance to do much else.

The clip shows two men who were dining at separate tables inside the restaurant getting up from their seats and grabbing and restraining the attacker.

According to Sarah, one of the owners of the family-run establishment, other customers ran from the scene and hid in the restroom and the kitchen, KGO reported.

"It was quite a shock, and everyone was scared," Sarah added to the station.

What happened next?

The two men helped restrain the attacker until Berkeley police arrived a short time later, KGO said.

Sarah extended a "thank you" to them during the interview with the station: "Just want to say thank you so much for your help, and you're very kind. You didn't hesitate to help us on that day. If that day nobody did anything, the man could have gotten away. Really, really appreciate you being our customer and being a Good Samaritan."

Certainly intervening in this type of situation isn't completely unheard of, but as readers of TheBlaze know all too well, it seems as though there have been a growing number of cases in which onlookers choose to just watch the attacks or, worse yet, record them on video for laughs.

Anything else?

Berkeley police told KGO the attacker was arrested for serious felony assault.

\u201cUPDATE: Berkeley Police sent me this mugshot of 32-year old Anthony Demaria who was arrested in connection to this incident. \n\nHe was charged with felony assault by the DA. https://t.co/upxI5mAreo\u201d
— Dion Lim (@Dion Lim) 1668402631

Sarah added to the station that the suspect later said his behavior was due to a death in the family.

'Heroes ... ripped her from her abductor': Amber Alert proves instrumental in rescuing teenager kidnapped on Hawaii beach

'Heroes ... ripped her from her abductor': Amber Alert proves instrumental in rescuing teenager kidnapped on Hawaii beach



A teenage girl from Hawaii is now home safe, thanks to the help of some Good Samaritans she encountered at a restaurant on the other side of the island.

According to reports, Duncan Kealoha Mahi, 52, kidnapped Mikella Debina, 15, last Friday while she was enjoying a day at the beach with her boyfriend. At approximately 1:30 p.m. local time, Mahi reportedly approached the couple at Anaeho’omalu Bay Beach on the main island of Hawaii. Mahi then allegedly forced Debina at knifepoint to tie up and blindfold her boyfriend so that he could abduct her without the boyfriend's interference.

After the two disappeared, law enforcement groups immediately began a manhunt to find Mahi and Debina. In fact, the state issued its first-ever Amber Alert to help find the missing teen.

It proved to be instrumental in bringing her home. Nearly 24 hours later, folks at Hilo’s Cafe Pesto, nearly 70 miles away from Anaeho’omalu Bay Beach, were able to help rescue the girl and reunite her with her family when they recognized her from the Amber Alert.

A host at the cafe, Bridge Hartman, said he noticed that something was "off" about the young girl and the older gentleman. The dress Debinahad been wearing at the beach was discovered abandoned with her cell phone near the Kona airport, and she was now wearing ill-fitting men's clothes. She was also having a heated discussion with her companion, Hartman claimed.

"Even if it wasn’t her, my brain was like, ‘I need to get her,'" said Hartman.

"Then I realized it was her," he recalled. "And I yelled out, 'That’s the girl! That’s the Amber Alert girl!'"

Hartman then managed to free Debina from Mahi's clutches and steer her towards the rear of the restaurant for safety. Another woman at the restaurant helped her call her mother.

Her mother, Cherese “Cher” Angelel, called the helpful restaurant employees and patrons "heroes" who had "ripped [Mikella] from her abductor." Though shaken up by the events, Mikella is otherwise reported to be "in good health."

Mahi did manage to escape from the cafe, but police located him soon afterwards and placed him under arrest for kidnapping. He also had other outstanding warrants for which they arrested him.


Young men applied their missionary training to save man and woman left for dead in hit-and-run



At 8:55 p.m. on July 30, a 23-year-old woman and a 30-year-old man were struck by a semi-truck in a hit-and-run on the Woodland Street Bridge in Nashville, Tennessee. The truck, which had veered onto the sidewalk — said to have been pulling a white trailer with Tennessee tags — left behind "blood everywhere."

Joshua Campbell, 21, his teenage brother, and some friends witnessed the accident. They ran over to find the male victim on the ground, badly injured and screaming, "Please save me, God help me."

The young men immediately began to help, equipped with lifesaving skills recently taught to them by missionaries at the Bible Survival and Combat Camp, an organization “dedicated to restoring biblical young manhood."

CBS 42 - Screenshot

According to WKRN, the first to act was 17-year-old Mark Harrison. Harrison created a tourniquet using the male victim’s pants. "I took his pants off and wrapped it around his legs as good as I could get it." An onlooker provided his belt to help stop the bleeding.

Campbell indicated that the injury, which had exposed bone, was "gruesome."

Noting that "it was really a seconds-count situation" and that the victim "was losing blood very fast," Campbell and the other young men suspended the victim's legs against the bridge railing.

After doing what they could to slow the bleeding, the young men, aided by a witness, continuously applied pressure to the victim’s legs and waited for paramedics to arrive. Unsure of whether the victim would survive, the young men prayed together.

Both victims, though critically injured, are reportedly in stable condition at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Harrison suggested, "It's got to be a miracle."


Video: Man punches state trooper in face on side of highway — and Good Samaritans pull over to help subdue attacker



Dashcam video caught an unsettling scene, as a man who had been walking along the shoulder of Interstate 4 punched a Florida Highway Patrol officer in the face, WTSP-TV reported.

What are the details?

The state trooper was called just before 10 a.m. Friday about a man who was wearing a Mickey Mouse shirt and carrying a duffle bag walking on the left shoulder of the interstate just west of exit 5 in Tampa, the station said.

The trooper approached the man — identified as Alexander Hernandez Delgado — and asked him why he walking along the interstate, WTSP said.

Dash cam shows drivers help Florida trooper punched by suspect on I-4youtu.be

Delgado told the trooper he's an artist, and his mother had just kicked him out of the house, the station said, citing the FHP report. After running his name through a database, the trooper reportedly tried to search Delgado and put him in the back of his cruiser, WTSP said.

"The subject became argumentative and stated that I am bothering him and that he would like to be left alone," the trooper noted in the arrest report, according to the station. "I state to him that I'm just trying to assist him off the interstate and attempted to guide the subject toward the back seat of my patrol vehicle."

Dashcam video then captured the moment Delgado punched the officer in the face.

"The subject attempted to run north toward the center median guardrail, and I attempted to place the subject in custody, and the subject proceeds to resist with violence throwing several punches and striking me again," the trooper noted in the report, according to WTSP.

Dashcam video showed the officer tackling Delgado near the median, but authorities said Delgado kept fighting, the station noted.

Good Samaritans step up

But soon a truck driver pulled over, ran toward the scuffle, and helped subdue Delgado so the trooper could handcuff him.

Image source: YouTube screenshot

Other drivers also pulled over and ran to the scene to help the trooper.

Image source: YouTube screenshot

What happened to the trooper and the suspect?

Paramedics checked out the trooper and Delgado, WTSP said. The trooper had a bloody nose but was otherwise OK, the station said, adding that Delgado had a minor cut on his chin.

Delgado was arrested and booked into the Hillsborough County Jail on charges of battery on a law enforcement officer and resisting an officer with violence, WTSP reported.

Alexander Hernandez Delgado (pictured below) has been charged with battery on a law enforcement officer and resisting officer with violence. He's being held in the Hillsborough County Jail without bond.pic.twitter.com/aTuXkYVjOv
— Shane Battis TV (@Shane Battis TV) 1647700180

'The cops can't do it all themselves'

Randy Sutton — founder of Wounded Blue, an organization that helps law enforcement officers who are injured in the line of duty — had high praise for the motorists who stopped to help the trooper.

“The cops can’t do it all themselves,” Sutton told WFLA-TV, adding that “every officer, doesn’t matter what community they serve, is in danger, every single day that they’re out on the streets."

The trooper went right back to work Friday following the incident, the station said, adding that the Good Samaritan motorists also went about their day's business.

Insane video captures moment woman tries to kidnap baby in broad daylight — and then 2 Good Samaritans step in



Video surveillance footage captured the moment a woman approached another woman pushing a baby in a stroller and attempted to steal the child outside a California store.

What are the details?

Two unnamed women were walking down a Sacramento-area street when a third woman approached them and began screaming, "Give me my baby!"

According to a Wednesday report from KMAX-TV, the two startled women immediately attempted to get away from the woman, but she persisted, chasing them and the child until the store's owner came rushing out of the business to help.

Ashraf Ali, owner of Express Smog Pros in Sacramento, said that he only remembers the woman yelling.

"I try my best running to the baby, and I protect the baby," Ali recalled of the harrowing incident. "And she was shouting, and she was saying, 'This is my baby!'"

The child, according to KMAX, was not the woman's baby, but that didn't stop her from continually trying to wrest the stroller away from its protectors.

"She come back and she again shouting, 'Hey, my baby, give me my baby,' so I said, 'No, don't touch baby,'" Ali continued.

He added that he believed the unnamed woman would soon begin hitting him if she wasn't stopped.

At that point, a second Good Samaritan rushed across the street to help Ali protect the child and two other women from the bizarre attempted kidnapping.

According to the station, the second Good Samaritan called 911 as the woman ran into the road.

Ali explained, "Traffic, people stopped traffic, but she saw everybody stopping and she jumped through the traffic too, it was crazy. I didn't know what she would do with baby."

The names of the victims remain unknown at the time of this reporting, but the local sheriff's office told KMAX that the child is safe at home with family.

Ali added, "We are human, you know, we have to save everyone, if you see something wrong, at least you have to try."

KCRA-TV reported that authorities arrested a woman named Dedra Gentry in connection with the incident.

Gentry now faces a felony charge of attempted kidnapping.

Man stabs woman multiple times, but good Samaritans come to her rescue — and attacker winds up in hospital with severe head injuries



When a man approached a woman outside a residence in Michigan City, Indiana, just before 3:30 a.m. Monday and began engaging her conversation, his assumption may have been that no one else was around at that hour.

But apparently there were others nearby — and police said that when the 67-year-old man began stabbing the 55-year-old woman, a number of those folks came to her rescue, the Times of Northwest Indiana reported.

What happened next?

"A group of people in the area came to the victim's aid after witnessing what took place," police said.

Police who were called to the scene in the 1000 block of East Michigan Boulevard said they found the woman suffering from multiple stab wounds to her body.

But cops also found a second injured individual: the woman's alleged attacker. Turns out he was suffering from severe head injuries, police said.

Police said both the victim and suspect were taken to Franciscan Health Michigan City Hospital with significant but non-life-threatening injuries, the station reported.

Anything else?

Police said officers conducted interviews, searched the area for video surveillance, and collected evidence at the scene. However, police also said additional information about the incident won't be released at the moment in order to protect the integrity of the investigation. Police are asking those who may have witnessed the incident, have information about it, or possess video of it to contact them.

How did folks react?

One commenter reacting to the report of the incident on the police department's Facebook page wondered why people aren't sleeping at 3:30 a.m. — but others responded that they themselves are up at that hour getting ready and departing their homes for work.

Regarding the circumstances surrounding the attack, another commenter said that "people are getting crazier by the day."

(H/T: The Police Tribune)