ADVERTISEMENT
St. Paul honors 11 police officers who saved lives
Jan. 20--They saved people from perilous situations -- jumping off a bridge, a house full of flames, bleeding out from a stab wound.
St. Paul Police Chief Thomas Smith recognized 11 officers Wednesday with Life-Saving Awards, but first he invoked one of his favorite quotes -- "Courage is grace under pressure," by Ernest Hemingway.
"And you're going to ... hear some stories today about some officers ... that were under intense pressure for the things they did to save somebody else's life," Smith said.
One officer has been "blessed with a double dose of grace," Smith said, noting that Officer Michael DeTomaso would get the award twice for his work in separate incidents.
These are how the officers earned the awards:
-- A man perched on the outside railing of the High Bridge on Dec. 13, 2014, holding onto a light pole. For two hours, Sgt. Don Benner and officers Timothy Hale and Stephen Lentsch tried to persuade him to climb back to safety. But the man said "goodbye" and leaned over the water.
Benner, DeTomaso and Officer Daniel Gleason grabbed onto the man to keep him from falling, and firefighters helped lift him to safety. "The collective determination and perseverance to prevent this man from ending his life is admirable," their commendation said.
-- Officers Charles Ankney and Jeffrey Boyle were on patrol July 28, 2014, when they came across a home engulfed in flames, their commendation said. People gathered on the street yelled to them that people were inside, and one assisted officers to open a window and help the residents escape.
One resident had panicked when she saw the fire and hadn't escaped with her 6-month-old daughter. "The officers' courageous and quick actions saved the lives of this terrified woman and her daughter," the commendation said.
-- Officer Matthew Brodin was a new St. Paul officer Feb. 1, when he and his field-training officer responded to an assault and found a man lying on the floor with a stab wound to his neck. Brodin applied direct pressure to the wound until paramedics arrived; medics said "without the quick action to stop blood flow, the victim would have died," according to his commendation.
-- Sgt. James LaBarre responded May 17, 2014, to a call of an unconscious woman suspected of overdosing. "Despite the chaotic scene, he initiated chest compressions while waiting for medics to arrive," LaBarre's commendation said.
The young woman's lips were blue, but she began to breathe and was taken to the hospital. LaBarre's "efforts and quick decision to immediately start CPR undoubtedly saved" her life, the commendation said.
-- A man had collapsed outside the Dorothy Day Center on May 3, and Officer Nicole Obrestad began to perform CPR on him. Officer Edward Dion and DeTomaso soon arrived and assisted with CPR for about 5 minutes until paramedics took over. The man wasn't breathing and had no pulse, and the St. Paul fire paramedics took the unusual step of cutting open the man's throat to get air into his blocked windpipe, saving his life.
Mara H. Gottfried can be reached at 651-228-5262. Follow her at twitter.com/MaraGottfried.
Copyright 2016 - Pioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn.