‘We’ll take care of our own’: What I saw on the ground in Asheville



I’ve seen a lot of destruction in my life. I’ve walked through war zones and cities torn apart by riots, and I've stood at the sites of natural disasters that leave communities devastated. But what I saw in Asheville, North Carolina, after Hurricane Helene was unlike anything I’ve ever witnessed.

Houses were washed down rivers, upside down and crushed. Train tracks, strong enough to support locomotives, were left suspended in midair after the earth beneath them was eroded away. Semi-trucks, rolled by the force of the floodwaters, now lie like children’s toys, tossed and overturned hundreds of feet from the road. Whole towns have been uprooted and scattered — debris from homes miles away, stacking up like dominoes, bridges that stood for decades washed out by water so high that it flowed six feet over their tops.

'You tell everybody you know — even if they don’t care — we’ll take care of our own damn selves if nobody shows up.'

I stood there, looking at this idyllic small town in the Blue Ridge Mountains, and I thought, “This will take years to rebuild. Maybe even decades.” But I didn’t just see destruction. I saw something far more powerful than nature’s wrath: the resilience of the American spirit.

My expectations for the government’s assistance were low before I arrived in Asheville, given its failing track record in previous natural disasters, but its response to Hurricane Helene victims — or lack thereof — was a new category of negligence. But the people in Asheville weren’t waiting on FEMA or the federal government to swoop in. They knew no one was coming.

The bridges were out, roads were destroyed, and the mountains had isolated them from outside help. But instead of despair, I saw hope. Instead of panic, I saw action. People were taking care of each other, and that is the America I remember, like in the days after 9/11 when we came together regardless of political party, race, or background. We didn’t care about who voted for whom. We just saw our neighbors hurting, and we asked, “Are you OK? What can I do to help?”

I saw that again in North Carolina. I saw it in the man who turned his Harley-Davidson dealership into a helicopter landing zone, shoveling mud out of his showroom just so rescue teams could land. I saw it in the volunteers flying missions across treacherous terrain, getting the elderly and the injured out of danger. They weren’t asking for government permission. They were doing what needed to be done.

Adam Smith, a retired Special Forces veteran who is coordinating the landing of helicopters in Asheville, told me that the FAA is trying to shut down the operation because it isn’t federally regulated. He told the feds that they’re going to leave because he has a helicopter landing in a few minutes that will actually help people while they are barking orders from Washington.

One story stood out to me. We landed to help evacuate an elderly woman with a broken hip and a severe infection. She just had surgery, but because her family didn’t have insurance, the hospital pushed her out as fast as it could. Her wound became infected, and her leg was on fire. We helped airlift her to get her desperately needed antibiotics and treatment. There were no government resources to help her to an emergency room.

As we loaded the woman into the helicopter, her grandson turned to me and said, “You tell everybody you know — even if they don’t care — we’ll take care of our own damn selves if nobody shows up.” That hit me hard because it’s the truth. It’s the way America used to be, and it’s the way we need to be again.

As I flew through those mountains in the helicopter, I couldn’t help but think of Billy Graham. I’d visited Asheville about 10 years ago to see him, and I remember thinking how beautiful and peaceful the town was. Today, it’s unrecognizable. The destruction is overwhelming. But the people are stronger than ever.

The government can’t save us. Washington is too slow and too bureaucratic, and quite frankly, the government doesn’t care. I saw it firsthand. We found a FEMA truck parked under a tree, its workers sitting at a card table in the shade. They weren’t doing anything to help.

But we’re Americans. We can take care of ourselves. We don’t need Washington to save us. We need each other. This is the America that Billy Graham spoke to me about — the America that will rise again in times of trouble. And while the government might fail us, we will not fail each other. And that’s exactly what I saw in North Carolina — Americans stepping up, taking care of their neighbors, and rebuilding their communities.

This is what I told the people of Asheville: You are not forgotten. There are millions of Americans who love you, who are praying for you, and who are ready to help. Because that’s what we do. We don’t wait for permission. We roll up our sleeves and take care of our own.

And to the rest of America, I say this: It’s time to remember who we are. It’s time to stop looking to Washington for solutions and start looking at each other. Because when the chips are down, it’s not the government that’s going to save us. It’s you and me, and if we stand together, nothing — no hurricane, no flood, no disaster — can break us.

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Black belt family members hear screams next door to their studio, rush over to rescue female from attempted sexual assault



A family of taekwondo black belts on Tuesday heard screams next door to their Houston-area studio, hurried over, and ended up rescuing 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" who "rushed to safe [sic] the day."

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.'

Gonzalez added that "deputies were dispatched to a disturbance in the 6800 block of Fry Road. Upon arrival, instructors from the Yong-In Tae Kwon Do dojo had a male pinned to the ground. During the course of their investigation, deputies learned the instructors were notified of yelling next door. The instructors went next door where they observed a male attempting to sexually assault a female. They were able to pull the female away from her attacker. The male then turned to attack the good samaritans. By utilizing their training and discipline, they managed to stop the assault and hold him. Deputies obtained charges for attempted sexual assault and unlawful detention on behalf of the survivor and assault on behalf of the instructors."

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 4th-degree black belts in taekwondo, with their dad boasting an 8th-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 to 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.

'My dad is strong. He expected us to protect him,' Simon An added to NBC News. 'He had a lot of trust in us.'

Of their dad's skills, Simon An told KHOU that his father "just kept him in the corner, he just kept pushing down." Hannah An called it "automatic self-defense, automatic taekwondo style," KHOU reported.

Simon An told NBC News that "the intruder was trying to run away — scratching, biting, anything he could do," but Grandmater An held down the attacker for 10 minutes until law enforcement arrived.

“My dad is strong. He expected us to protect him,” Simon An added to NBC News. “He had a lot of trust in us.”

Hannah An shared with the station that she and her mother, Hong An, took the female to their training center: "Making sure that she's OK because she needed that after that experience, after that situation that happened out of nowhere."

Gonzalez told KHOU that 19-year-old Alex Robinson was arrested and charged with attempted sexual assault, unlawful detention, and assault on the instructors.

Robinson appeared in probable cause court overnight on the sexual assault charge, the station said, adding that a defense attorney asked for a low bond, claiming Robinson is indigent and has mental health concerns. The judge set his bond at $100,000, KHOU said.

The following day, the station said students surrounded Grandmaster An, who didn't seem rattled by the experience: "I'm very proud of my family."

Hannah An told KHOU she isn't dwelling on the "heroes" accolade, either: "I thank everybody who's calling us that, but still, I think anybody can do it."

Simon An added to the station he's grateful his family's martial arts skills could help: "You wouldn’t really expect it in an everyday situation, but when the time comes, it’s very valuable."

You can view KHOU's interview with members of the An family here.

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Pro boxer runs 12 miles with injured dog on his back, saving the wounded animal from a vicious mountain goat attack



Professional boxer Tristan Hamm said that he carried his dog about 12 miles to safety after the animal was attacked by a mountain goat.

Hamm, a former pipeline worker and outdoorsman, recently transitioned into professional boxing and has made two high-profile appearances in the ring. His last fight came against former NFL running back Le'Veon Bell in Houston, Texas.

The influencer nicknamed "Mr. Adventure" said he was in the middle of a hike on a foot mountain when his dog was attacked by a mountain goat. He noted that the mountain was 12,000 feet high.

"My dog was attacked by a mountain goat at the top of a 12k foot mountain," Hamm wrote on X.

Hamm then revealed that he picked up the dog and put him on his back before running 12 miles down to the safety of his truck where he tended to the animal's wounds.

"Had to run him down 12 miles back to the truck on my back. Was able to stop the bleeding and staple him shut. He's in good hands and spirits."

'A warning for people who hike with their dogs to get in shape.'

Attached photos then showed the dog with a gaping wound, likely from the gore of the goat. Subsequent pictures showed the wound stapled shut and the thankful dog with bandages over his injury.

Hamm later showed more photos with the dog pictured helping share the load as he carried equipment up to a mountain's summit.

An anonymous account criticized Hamm for taking photos:

"Bros dog got attacked and bro took pics of it for his Twitter," the person wrote.

The hiker rejected the assertion and said that his story should serve as a warning to any hikers who travel with animals.

"Naw, more like a warning for people who hike with their dogs to get in shape so they can save their dog if they have to," Hamm responded.

Hamm started working on oil pipelines when he was 16 years old, which he said provided him with a solid work ethic while maturing him beyond his years.

The boxer also previously told Blaze News that once he started gaining notoriety for his travel videos, he became concerned about places he visited being left in despair after others traveled to the same location.

"I started noticing that when I would go back to certain places I had traveled to, they didn't look like how they were before. So, I've encouraged people to, if they are producing traveling or outdoor content, not reveal or geo-tag their location."

Hamm has done his best to promote conservation wherever in his travels and has continued to take precautions and limit identifying factors whenever posting a video.

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'Abandoned by the Biden administration': Rep. Cory Mills rescues 10 Americans from nightmare in Haiti



The days Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) served with the Army's 82 Airborne Division and as a defense contractor may be behind him, but he's not letting his corresponding skill set go to waste. The Florida Republican took part in a Monday night rescue of a group of Americans trapped in Haiti, the rudderless Caribbean nation presently in the grips of cannibalistic gangs.

"I am proud to report that my team and I were successful in evacuating and rescuing a trapped, and at risk group of Americans from 'Have Faith Orphanage' in Haiti last night," Mills noted on X.

What's the background?

Haiti was already in rough shape before gangs started torching police stations, massacring civilians, and eating human flesh in broad daylight late last month. After all, the country's president was assassinated in 2021, and criminal elements have since taken full advantage of the resultant power vacuum.

In recent weeks, armed gangs have lain waste to the nation's capital, Port au Prince, and besieged the international airport. They've also taken control of the port and freed well over 4,000 convicts from the country's two biggest prisons, reported the Independent.

Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry traveled to Kenya in late February to beg for a United Nations-backed security force to stabilize his country. He has since announced he's throwing in the towel and resigning his post, as demanded by Haiti's terroristic gangs.

The State Department has advised Americans to get off the island, but that's now all but impossible.

State Department spokesman Matthew Miller reportedly said Monday that Americans unable to leave Haiti should register through the department's crisis intake form on the embassy's website.

The U.S. Embassy in Port au Prince states on its website that it "is not able to facilitate air travel for private citizens."

Mitch Albom, founder of a Haitian orphanage, told WDIV-TV, "There's no planes, no boats, there's no way out, and everything has been shut down by the gangs."

ABC News indicated that the land crossing into the Dominican Republic is similarly a no-go as the route is dominated by gangs.

Not waiting on Biden

Michigan Rep. Lisa McClain (R) told WDIV that she heard about Mitch Albom's troubles getting out of Haiti and reached out to him. Having elsewhere expressed doubt that the Biden administration was up the challenge, McClain reached out to Rep. Cory Mills.

"I said, 'I need your help. My constituents need your help,'" McClain reportedly told Mills.

Sure enough, Mills agreed to lead the rescue mission into the gang-ravaged island.

The Detroit News reported that the Florida Republican put together a crew and secured a helicopter and pilot in the Dominican Republic. After a first attempt was grounded by mechanical issues, Mills secured another chopper, then flew into Haiti, successfully evacuating Albom and nine others.

The 10 evacuees, eight of whom are from Michigan, were safely escorted to the Dominican Republic around 3:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Albom expressed gratitude for the rescue, noting in a statement, "A group of us from Have Faith Haiti, including my wife and myself, were evacuated overnight from Haiti, where we had been sheltering in place since a state of emergency was declared."

"I had a responsibility to bring home 8 wonderful volunteers who were working with us," continued Albom. "But my wife's and my hearts ache for our kids still there. Saying goodbye to them was horribly difficult. We pray for help in making their country safe for them again, and we will be back with them the moment it is possible."

There are apparently 60 children and 40 staff at the orphanage.

McClain announced at an Armed Services Committee Hearing this week, "Last night, I coordinated with Congressman Cory Mills to rescue several Americans trapped in Port Au Prince."

"Congressman Mills actually participated in the rescue of those Americans abandoned by the Biden administration and the State Department," added McClain.

— (@)

Mills noted on X, "This recent mission reiterates a disturbing reality that under President Biden's leadership American lives are continually jeopardized. I have conducted rescue/ evacs of Americans multiple times when Joe Biden has deserted them. There's a clear pattern of abandonment!"

"Americans at home and abroad are more unsafe under Biden than ever before," continued Mills. "We need President Trump back in the White House as the world can't afford 4 more years of Biden's failed administration."

I am proud to report that my team and I were successful in evacuating and rescuing a trapped, and at risk group of Americans from \u2018Have Faith Orphanage\u2019 in Haiti last night.\n\nThis recent mission reiterates a disturbing reality that under President Biden\u2019s leadership American\u2026
— (@)

Mills has a history of stepping in to help stranded Americans ostensibly left behind by the Biden administration.

Amid the Biden administration's botched 2021 withdrawal from Afghanistan, Mills — then a congressional candidate — reportedly helped another group of Americans get home safely.

Last year, the decorated combat veteran helped rescue scores of Americans who were left stranded in Israel following the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attacks, including a son of Rep. Bill Huizenga (R-Mich.).

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Dog helps save elderly owner who fell through the ice: 'Better give the dog a ribeye'



A 65-year-old man walking his dog across a frozen lake Thursday in East Bay Township, Michigan, fell through the ice and into the frigid depths below. Shoreside witnesses called 911, prompting a rapid response by Michigan State Police officer Kammeron Bennetts.

While quick to the scene, Bennetts, 30, still had to figure out how to mount a rescue without similarly ending up trapped on the wrong side of the lake. Fortunately, the waterlogged man's Brittany bird-hunting dog was more than willing to help.

Bodycam footage shows a bystander point out a dog-shadowed gap on Arbutus Lake where the Traverse City man went under. The officer grabs a rescue disc from his cruiser, fastens a rope to it, then heads out onto the ice.

Although able to venture roughly 40 feet away from shore, Bennetts nevertheless falls short of the man's position due to his uncertainty about the solidity of the ice ahead. The officer tosses the rescue disc to the man. While unsuccessful, the initial attempt excites the dog, giving Bennetts an idea.

"You revert to the tools in front of you. I only had a dog in front of me, so use the dog," Bennetts later told People. "I saw she was ready to go to work."

"Send your pup here. Will she come to me?" Bennetts can be heard yelling to the man steeped in freezing water.

The man indicates the dog's name is Ruby.

"Ruby, come here! Come here, Ruby!" yells the officer.

After some whistling and another summons, the dog comes bolting over to Bennetts.

"Will she get ahold of this?" asks the officer, coiling the rope. Ruby quickly indicates she's ready to do that and more.

After fastening the disc and rope to Ruby's collar, Bennetts yells, "Call her! Call her!"

Bennetts, who has been on the force for two years, later indicated, "Within a minute your dexterity in your fingers goes, you lose speech, you lose everything."

Although ultimately in the water for 16 minutes, the Traverse City man nevertheless manages to call Ruby. The dog brings the disc over to her master. With a direct line to the man, Bennetts tells him to take the disc and begin kicking his legs.

The MSP officer begins pulling the man to shore with Ruby providing emotional support. A firefighter from Grand Traverse Metro Fire Department soon leaps into action, joining Bennetts in the rescue.

After the incident, the officer suggested to the Traverse City man, "You better give the dog a ribeye."

According to the MSP, the man was transported by ambulance to Munson Medical Center and later released.

The MSP Seventh District stated on X, "Great team work and well done!"

The MSP Sixth District noted, "What a good girl!!! ... Creative thinking helped save a life!!!"

— (@)

Michigan State Police Lt. Derrick Carroll told People, "Everyone is impressed by [Bennetts'] ability to take control of the situation and his ability to think outside the box to rescue the man in such a timely manner."

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Watch: Vermont state trooper makes heroic rescue of 8-year-old girl from icy pond



A Vermont state trooper made a heroic rescue of an 8-year-old from an icy pond.

Two sisters were playing on a frozen pond when they fell into the water in northwestern Vermont. An 80-year-old homeowner was able to pull the younger girl to shore, but the neighbor was unable to swim and couldn't save the older sister. The elderly man contacted the police.

Vermont State Trooper Michelle Archer responded to an emergency call about a small child plunging into a frigid pond on private property in Cambridge, Vermont. Archer was in the area and arrived at the scene within five minutes after the 911 call was made.

Archer retrieved a rope and flotation device from her police cruiser. The state trooper noticed the motionless girl in the middle of the pond, as seen in the police bodycam video.

Despite the freezing temperatures, Archer jumped into the icy water to rescue the 8-year-old girl.

Archer swam to the helpless girl in the bone-chillingly cold water and rescued the girl by bringing her back to the snow-covered shore.

The child snapped back to life and began making noises after being rescued from the freezing water.

A second state trooper arrived at the scene as Archer was bringing her out of the water. The second Vermont state trooper carried the girl to an ambulance that was already there.

The girl was rushed to the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington, Vermont. Despite her injuries first thought to be life-threatening, the girl has made a complete recovery and returned home within several days.

"There wasn’t a whole lot of thinking going on. Something was taking over – training. It was the opposite of panic," Archer told local outlet Vermont News First.

Vermont State Police officials commended Archer, trooper Keith Cote, and the homeowner “for their selfless, heroic conduct, and all three have been recommended to receive the agency’s Lifesaving Award."

The incident happened on Dec. 17, but authorities didn't release the police bodycam footage until Friday.

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Body cam video: Vermont State Police Trooper dives into icy pond to save child www.youtube.com

Woman survives 5 days in mangled truck after plummeting 250 feet into canyon

Woman survives 5 days in mangled truck after plummeting 250 feet into canyon



A woman spent four nights trapped in a car wreck after she drove into a canyon in an attempt to avoid hitting a deer.

The unnamed driver was traveling near Mount Baldy, California, on a winding road outside Los Angeles. She swerved to avoid hitting a deer and fell 250 feet onto the embankment, leaving her pickup truck crushed in a field of brush.

The woman reportedly broke her ankle, CNN reported, and survived freezing temperatures by using blankets and supplies in her car. She also reportedly set up bowls in her truck to catch rainwater.

The driver was allegedly trapped in a standing position, with her head partially out the window. However, due to her injuries she was unable to escape on her own.

A fisherman discovered the woman on the fifth day as he was walking along a trail and heard her faint cries for help.

"I don’t know how she survived it," Chris Ayres told a CNN affiliate. "I saw the steering wheel, was almost folded like a taco. Her head must have hit that," he added.

Ayres did not have any cell phone service, so he walked to the road to seek help. He tried to flag down an ambulance, but it didn't stop. A forest service truck later stopped.

The San Dimas Mountain Rescue Team eventually came to the woman's aid and said the truck "couldn't be seen from the road." Ayres' "quest for new fishing waters ultimately saved her life," the San Dimas Mountain Rescue Team wrote on Facebook.

First responders noted that if it were not for her blankets, the woman might not have survived.

"Probably helped her out a lot because it was very cold up there," Captain Ian Thrall from L.A. County Fire told ABC7. "Might be completely different circumstances if she didn't have anything to keep her warm at night."

The county's Fire Air Operations team transported the woman to hospital.

Ayres chalked the rescue up to divine intervention and said "It’s got to be God-led, I happened to stop in that one spot."

"It’s almost like fate," he said.

A few days earlier, a man similarly survived six days in a crushed car beneath a bridge in Indiana. Unable to capture water in a container, the man filtered rainwater through his shirt as it fell down from a drainpipe. He was rescued when two men came across him while out for a walk on their way to a local Bass Pro Shop.

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Wyoming man who saved woman and children from a hellish fate awarded highest civilian honor for heroism



A Wyoming man on Monday was awarded North America's highest civilian honor for heroism. The Carnegie Hero Fund Commission recognized former oil worker Ryan Pasborg, 33, for risking life and limb last winter to save a young mother and her 4-year-old son from an inferno in James Town.

'He gave them a fighting chance'

On Feb. 1, 2022, Stephanie Wadsworth and her four young children — then ages 12, 8, 6, and 4 — were sleeping in their home on the block of Highway 374 in James Town when investigators suspect a child's malfunctioning hoverboard kindled a flame.

The fire spread quickly and burst out of the home's bedroom window, catching the eye of a passerby headed down 374.

Although running late for work on the oil field, Pasborg, of Rock Springs, noticed there were no emergency vehicles at the scene. In the way of help, he was it.

Pasborg didn't miss a beat. He rushed over to the house and called 911. As he pulled into the driveway, the derrickman spotted a young girl and two boys walking out of the house, according to the Sweetwater County Sheriff's Office.

Deputy Jason Mower with the SCSO said, "He didn't have time to think. He knew what he thought was the right thing to do and he acted," KSTU-TV reported at the time.

The oil man made his way into the burning home through the garage. Unable to see his way through on account of the thick smoke, Pasborg pulled himself forward on his hands and knees.

Several feet into the kitchen, he bumped up against a little figure: 4-year-old Weston Wadsworth. Pasborg grabbed the child and carried him outside. Since the windchill temperature was well below zero, Pasborg gathered the children together and set them in his truck to stay warm. Once the children were secure, Pasborg bolted back into the compromised structure to finish the job he had set out to do.

Again, Pasborg crawled through the kitchen and again he came across another crumpled figure, this time the children's scorched and suffocating mother. Pasborg dragged Stephanie outside and began performing CPR until life returned to her.

Cowboy State Daily reported that Stephanie Wadsworth suffered burns to 77% of her body and would certainly have perished were it not for Pasborg's quick intervention.

After reuniting the family, Pasborg got Stephanie Wadsworth and her children a safe distance away from the inferno and waited for first responders to arrive.

According to the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission, while Pasborg inhaled smoke, he didn't seek medical treatment.

Deputy Mower indicated that Pasborg's help did not end there. He later personally delivered "several hundred dollars' worth of clothing and necessities" to the family at their grandmother's house.

Sheriff John Grossnickle said, "Not only is it a blessing in its own right that Mr. Pasborg was in the right place at the right time, but his willingness without second thought to risk his own life to help save this family was the difference between life and death for this young mother and her child; he gave them a fighting chance."

"There are no words to adequately express the magnitude of Ryan's bravery other than he is a perfect example of what it means to be a real hero," added Grossnickle.

'Old-school hometown do-good people'

The Sweetwater County Sheriff's Office formally celebrated Pasborg's heroism in May 2022, indicating that the mother and child spared a fiery death were "well on their way down the road to recovery."

Pasborg also received a hero's welcome during the 2022 Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo.

Green River Man Receives Standing Ovation At Cheyenne Frontier Daysyoutu.be

This week, Pasborg received the Carnegie Medal Award.

"This award is given for heroism that we don't see everyday," Jewels Phraner, a spokeswoman for the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission, told the Cowboy State Daily. "It is an award that represents the best of humanity and we love to recognize people who demonstrate that."

Pasborg, nominated for the award by the Sweetwater County Sheriff's Office, indicated he didn't know what the medal was but was nevertheless honored to be recognized.

The hero's wife, Alexandria, told the Wyoming paper, "I get so emotional."

"My husband won't tell you, but that event took a toll on him mentally," said Alexandria. "He wakes up with nightmares sometimes. We are so thankful and grateful for this."

In addition to a $7,500 check and scholarship opportunities, the award will pay for the cost of medical expenses and mental health treatments Pasborg may have incurred in relation to the rescue.

Pasborg, who recently lost his oil job, said, "Both with Christmas just a week away and the bills, the timing was perfect."

Sheriff Grossnickle stressed the hero has maintained contact with the family since the rescue.

"I am honored to know someone like that," said Grossnickle. "Ryan is the example of what Wyoming is made of — the old-school hometown do-good people that make up our communities."

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Heroic farmer works feverishly to rescue hundreds of concert-goers from Hamas terrorists in dramatic dashcam footage



Hamas terrorists stormed the Supernova music festival in Kibbutz Re'im on Oct. 7, massacring hundreds of people and taking at least 20 hostages. While the area was still overrun by invaders, a farmer worked feverishly to keep those numbers from climbing.

Oz Davidian of Maslul made roughly 20 trips between the beleaguered kibbutz and his farming village, rescuing revelers who survived the initial massacre.

The Times of Israel reported that while each trip was roughly 10 miles, Davidian needed to chart a new route every time on account of the roving terrorists. After all, Israeli security forces, unaware of the music festival prior to the invasion, would not regain control of the area and Route 232 until later in the day.

Dashcam footage shows Davidian driving around burned-out cars and through clouds of smoke. In one instance, gunshots crackle behind the truck as trigger-happy terrorists shrink in the rear view.

— (@)

Davidian recalled one of his passengers figuring him for a special agent. "I said to her 'Why?' and she said, 'Look around you, there's nobody here, nobody, we've been stuck here for hours, and there's nobody. You're the only one who came.'"

Davidian told the Israel Defense and Security Forum he awoke on Oct. 7 to the sound of sirens.

"Living in the south, we've learned to recognize various kinds of missiles, and this was obviously an unusual attack. The rate of fire and the scope of it were unlike anything before. I went up to the roof to see, and the sky was full of nothing but the flashes of rocket interceptions."

After ensuring his wife and four daughters were safe inside a reinforced room at home, the farmer ventured out, looking to help. He learned about the music festival after picking up the first of the roughly 120 strangers he would ferry to safety that day.

"I brought them to Patish and went back in toward the site of the party. I knew it was up to me because you can't reach the place unless you know the area. The gaps in the fence, the wadi. No one else would know the way there," said Davidian.

A reserve army officer whom Davidian picked up along the way had the locations of other survivors in hiding on his phone. They reportedly returned to the scene of the massacre together, finding "hundreds of corpses all over the place, on the road and in the fields," along with "loads of cars – some burnt out, some with their lights blinking, and corpses with shotgun wounds inside cars."

On one of his trips toward the source of the black smoke on the horizon, Davidian encountered a group of men he initially figured for paramedics and soldiers.

"I asked one of them what was happening, and before he answered me, I realized that they might be terrorists. I addressed him in Arabic, and asked 'Are they dead, are there injured,' and he answered, and then suddenly, I understood he was a terrorist and he understood that I was a Jew," said Davidian.

The farmer indicated he floored the gas pedal as the terrorists opened fire, but "by some miracle, none of [the bullets] hit the car."

"They were spraying everywhere with bullets. You can't get your head around that level of evil," said Davidian. "They shot at everything that moved."

According to the farmer, Hamas terrorists weren't just murdering. "They were raping," said Davidian. "One was raping, another was shooting, protecting the former, watching him rape."

Despite the carnage and confusion, Davidian and the reserve officer ultimately managed to track down plenty of survivors. They made sure to both record the names of the concert-goers they picked up and to give them an opportunity to call loved ones to notify them they were all right.

"When you see hundreds of young people, dead and wounded and fleeing into the fields, and terrorists shooting in every direction, you put everything to one side, the fear, the family, and you go to get them out," concluded Davidian.

His daughter Oriah said of her father, "He has always been my hero."

While initial reports put the death toll at the Supernova festival at around 260, the Times of Israel indicated investigators have since determined over 360 of the roughly 4,000 revelers were murdered on Oct. 7.

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