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Nail-biting moment heroic Georgia officers save four-week-old baby's life in parking lot
Nail-biting moment heroic Georgia officers save four-week-old baby's life in parking lot

Daily Mail​

time24-05-2025

  • Health
  • Daily Mail​

Nail-biting moment heroic Georgia officers save four-week-old baby's life in parking lot

The nail-biting moment two heroic Georgia police officers saved an infant's life after she became unresponsive at a CVS was caught on camera. Forest Park Officers Jimmy Arnold and Angelic Coley were discussing how the latter had never responded to an infant emergency call in her five years on the force when that exact call came in, they told Fox 5 Atlanta. A four-week-old baby was unresponsive at a Forest Parkway CVS on May 14. Bodycam footage showed the officer rushing to the scene, sirens blaring as Coley hopped out of the car and sprinted into the pharmacy. When she arrived inside the store, customers informed her the baby was out back with the mom a little way down the street. 'The baby, she's not breathing, please,' the mother, who was not identified, begged as she passed the child into the arms of Arnold. 'We got it, we got it,' Coley comforted her. As Arnold cradled the baby, Coley was seen performing CPR on the baby. Shortly after, the baby began to cry. 'We're breathing,' Arnold calmly said. 'She's moving, she's okay,' Coley told the mother. Arnold and Coley have been partners since they started on the force five years ago. 'He's definitely my crutch. I'm his muscle,' the female cop told Fox 5 Atlanta. They credit their excessive training as the reason they were able to calmly handle the situation and save the infant's life. Despite Georgia's requirement of only 20 hours of annual police training, Forest Park personally requires their officers to do 100 hours. Arnold had completed his CPR course just weeks before the incident. However, the irony wasn't lost on Coley, who was aware just moments before the life-saving call she had said she wasn't ready. 'It's an awesome feeling,' she told Fox 5 Atlanta of successfully saving the little girl's life. 'Especially knowing that 17 minutes before that call, I said that I wasn't ready.' While she and Arnold were talking about it before the call, her partner had told her: 'Nobody is ever ready for that.' The police department posted the bodycam footage to congratulate their officers on a job well done.

Forest Park officers hailed as heroes for saving infant's life with swift CPR
Forest Park officers hailed as heroes for saving infant's life with swift CPR

Yahoo

time24-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Forest Park officers hailed as heroes for saving infant's life with swift CPR

The Brief Forest Park police officers Lt. Jimmy Arnold and Cpl. Angelic Coley successfully revived a 4-week-old baby using CPR, highlighting their quick response and teamwork. The officers credit their department's rigorous training standards, which exceed Georgia's requirements, for their preparedness in handling the emergency. A remarkable coincidence placed the officers near the scene, allowing them to respond swiftly, with their advanced training in infant CPR proving crucial to the baby's revival. FOREST PARK, Ga. - Two Forest Park police officers are being praised for their life-saving actions after reviving a 4-week-old baby who had stopped breathing outside a CVS pharmacy on May 14. Body camera footage shows Lt. Jimmy Arnold and Cpl. Angelic Coley rushing to the scene on Forest Parkway, where they immediately began CPR on the unresponsive infant. What they're saying The officers arrived within a minute of the call. Arnold cradled the baby while Coley began chest compressions. Within about 10 seconds of CPR, the baby began to cry — a sound the officers described as pure relief. "Relief," Arnold said. "Yes, absolutely — relief." "Every second that goes by that that child's not receiving oxygen to the brain — those are critical seconds," Arnold said. The officers, who have worked together at the Forest Park Police Department for five years, credit their strong partnership and the department's rigorous training standards for their quick response. "He's definitely my crutch. I'm his muscle. He is the crutch. So I'm the muscle here," Coley said. While Georgia only requires 20 hours of police training annually, Forest Park Police Chief Chris Matson mandates 100 hours. Arnold said he had recently completed a CPR-focused course just six weeks earlier. "So the minimum standard for Georgia police officers is 20 hours of training. Chief Chris has a higher standard. He requires that we have 100 hours of training," Arnold said. Coley noted the irony that just minutes before the call, she had told Arnold she had never responded to an infant medical emergency and wasn't sure she'd be ready if one ever came. "We were actually having a conversation about working juvenile calls," she said. "I told him, within my five years of being here, I haven't worked a call of such — and I'm not ready to. And he said, well, nobody is ever ready for that." But she was. "It's an awesome feeling, especially knowing that 17 minutes before that call, I said that I wasn't ready," Coley said. In a remarkable coincidence, the officers had responded to a separate call at the same CVS earlier that day and were nearby when the emergency came in. "I definitely think God was, he was in that parking lot," Coley said. Both officers say the advanced training — particularly the distinctions in how CPR is performed on infants versus adults — played a crucial role in the successful outcome. The Source FOX 5's Eric Mock spoke with Lt. Jimmy Arnold and Cpl. Angelic Coley, both of the Forest Park Police Department, for this article.

New Jersey police officers commended for rescuing dog drowning in pool
New Jersey police officers commended for rescuing dog drowning in pool

CBS News

time13-05-2025

  • CBS News

New Jersey police officers commended for rescuing dog drowning in pool

Three police officers in Robbinsville, New Jersey, are being commended for their quick response after rescuing a drowning dog from a pool on Saturday. Robbinsville police said Patrolmen Slininger, Pica and Meehan responded to a home on Sienna Court after getting a 911 call that a dog was drowning. The dog, Zissou, was "clearly in distress and likely would have drowned had the officers not acted when they did," the Robbinsville Township Police Department said online about the rescue. On Saturday, May 10, 2025, Dispatch received a 911 call reporting a dog actively drowning in a backyard pool at a... Posted by Robbinsville Township Police Department on Monday, May 12, 2025 Body-worn camera footage obtained by CBS News Philadelphia shows Zissou's rescue. Then, the officers found another dog in the same backyard. After the officers got hold of the second dog, they found the pet owners, who said they had been searching for their dogs after they got loose earlier in the day. The pet owner and Zissou then went to the Robbinsville police station Saturday night and thanked the officers in person for their kindness.

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