Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Aurora, Marionville first responders thwart attempted suicide


(From the Aurora-Marionville Police Department)

On August 28th, near midnight, a dangerous and intense situation unfolded in Aurora. I believe the communities we serve deserve to know what your emergency services personnel do.

A call came in about a suicidal person who had scaled a tree, tied a strap around their neck, and was in the process of attempting suicide by hanging from approximately 30-40 feet in the air.

The Aurora Fire Department arrived. The person in the tree was known to staff and was known to suffer from addiction and legitimate attendant medical conditions. Captain Todd Wood (far right) and Firefighter Harley Stice (center) arrived. 








Wood operated a ladder from the fire apparatus while Stice was on the end of it, strapped to a safety device. Stice was extended to the individual in the tree who had by this point went into a seizure. The person was only remaining in the tree by the strap around their neck and a foot partially wedged in an extended branch.
 
From the top of the ladder, Stice attempted to rescue this individual and had only their dead body-weight to contend with as they were unresponsive. As they slipped from the tree, Stice persisted and held them with all of his strength. If they had fallen, they would have landed on pavement or concrete and most assuredly would have died.
 
While Stice held on to the person, the strap tightened around their neck and they began to suffocate. Officer Blake Baldwin (left) of AMPD arrived to help Stice.
 
With no available safety harness, Officer Baldwin scaled the ladder. He reached the top of the ladder, leaned out, and cut the strap from around the person’s neck, allowing them to breathe. Together, Stice and Baldwin pulled the person onto the ladder and Captain Wood lowered all three to safety. The individual was transported for medical and mental health treatment and is alive today.
 
We hear about these scenarios on TV, in movies. It’s intense and exciting. But for the men and women who do it in real life, it’s part terror and part second-nature. So often, we walk away from these situations and think, “it wasn’t that big of a deal.”








To all three of these heroes, I’m telling you it is a big deal. It’s a big deal because their work gave someone an opportunity at a better life. These men risked their own safety to ensure the safety of this person.
 
In this line of work, we get a lot of criticism. We have people challenge us, try to get a rise out of us, complain about how a particular situation didn’t turn out how they wanted, or are just angry at anyone associated with the government. But what makes me love this line of work more now than ever, is that I know we are the only people coming. When it gets bad, we’re on our way. We wouldn’t hesitate to pull our loudest critic from that tree or our strongest supporter. Because the gift of life is way more important than our petty disagreements.

It is an honor to work beside the heroes I have the privilege to see every day. It’s my pleasure to work with the firefighters we have in our area who have our backs, and we have theirs. It’s knowing we did the right thing for the right reasons that makes public safety a noble and worthwhile calling.
Thank you for allowing us to serve.
Chief Wes Coatney

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