Strangers Join Police Officers to Buy 95-Year-old New Air Conditioner
These police officers were heartbroken by an elderly veteran sitting in the heat all day – so they went straight to Home Depot for an air conditioner.
When a young boy was in trouble, Officer Jessie Ferreira Cavallo did not hesitate to rescue him – even though it involved jumping from a 30-foot overpass.
The 28-year-old officer was driving to work earlier this week when she saw a boy climb over a guardrail and jump onto the pavement below. Cavallo immediately parked her car and ran to check on the boy.
When she saw that he was lying motionless on the ground, she ran to her car, filled her pockets with first aid supplies, and then jumped after him.
"Everything happened so fast and I think my adrenaline was pumping so high," she told WLTX. "I didn't realize how high it was. It seemed doable. It didn't seem that high. I thought I jumped over a brick wall, or a cement barrier. It was so fast. It was more like tunnel vision. I saw the boy and I needed to get to him. I didn't see anything else."
Cavallo, who works for the Hastings-on-Hudson Police Department in New York, was helped by a passing woman in a military uniform. Together, they put a neck brace and splint on the 12-year-old boy. He briefly opened his eyes as she was speaking to him, but was mostly unresponsive.
The boy is now recovering in the hospital, and Cavallo says she is eager to visit him.
"I really want to know how he is doing. I don't know anything about him. I don't know his name or anything," she told the news outlet. "I just want to give him a hug."
This is not the first time that Cavallo has saved a life, either – during her 7 years on the force, the heroic policewoman has reportedly received half a dozen awards for saving an older man from a heart attack and preventing several deadly overdoses.
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