
That meant sudden movements could hurt him badly, McCallum explained. The first patient was unconscious and his body was stiff. Then she and Anderson “did a ‘1-2-3’ to kind of twist the patient into the back seat and get him out of the car,” McCallum said. “We cut the airbags and maintained C-spine stabilization,” she said, referring to the driver’s neck area.

Arleny Germonsen get the passengers out of the car. Tamika McCallum, an EMT with emergency room experience and a medical student, helped Anderson and Spc. “I immediately signaled for the rest of the Soldiers to come out of the vehicles to assist.” “We noticed smoke coming (out) of the vehicle and we didn’t know if the fire department was on the way, so we knew that we had to react fast,” he added. “My only objective was getting away from the vehicle and to (a) safe location and make sure their airway, breathing and circulation were intact,“ Anderson recalled. Realizing the car’s driver was in shock, Anderson, a 10-year veteran of the Army Guard and a New York City corrections officer, called for help. But the individual wasn’t responsive to painful stimuli,” Anderson said. “I immediately ran over, grabbed my knife, cut the airbag and seatbelt off. Two people were trapped in the sedan.Īnderson, an emergency medical technician, pulled the convoy of two Humvees and an LMTV truck over, hopped out of the LMTV and headed for the white car. Two people in the pickup truck were out and walking around.


Andre Anderson, the convoy commander.Ī 2008 Ford F-150 had smashed into a white Dodge Charger. Gabreski Air National Guard Base in Westhampton Beach on eastern Long Island for a weekend training exercise when they spotted the two-vehicle accident at exit 62 of the highway, according to Sgt. The Soldiers, assigned to the 442nd Military Police Company, were in a three-vehicle convoy heading to F.S. Seven New York Army National Guard MPs worked together to help two people severely injured in a car accident on Long Island’s Sunrise Highway May 20.
