Pizza Delivery Boy saves 5 children from burning house

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Feel-good story for once that I just saw on Youtube:






LAFAYETTE, Ind. − Just as police and firefighters learned there was a man and a child inside a burning house, Nick Bostic appears backlit by the flames walking towards first responders with the 6-year-old in his arms.

Police body-worn video released Thursday shows a police officer taking the crying girl from his arms as Bostic — winded, wheezing and wounded — sits down on the curb, and says, "I need oxygen."

In the video, Bostic just came from inside the burning house in the 2200 block of Union Street where he saved five people.

An officer helps Bostic to his feet and escorted him to the other side of the street, where Bostic lies down in the grass while an officer applies a tourniquet to Bostic's right arm, which is bleeding, according to the video.

"I can barely breathe," Bostic said.

On the video, Bostic asks, "Is the baby OK? Please tell me the baby's OK."

Someone off camera assures him the girl is fine.

Bostic got four people out of the house about 12:30 a.m. Monday, then went back into the inferno to find the 6-year-old girl upstairs, police said earlier in the week. The fire trapped Bostic and the girl on the second floor, and he jumped from the upstairs window with the girl in his arm.

The girl only suffered a minor cut to her foot, police said earlier in the week.

The accidental fire started on the front porch and is believed to have been caused by ashes emptied into a bucket before they were completely extinguished, according to the fire department's investigation.





Nicholas Bostic, a 25-year-old pizza delivery driver, happened to be driving past a home in the city of Lafayette at around 12:30 a.m. on Monday when he saw that a two-story house was on fire, according to a news release from the Lafayette police.

He feared people might be trapped inside but didn’t have his phone with him to call 911 and decided to go into the home himself, he told ABC 7 Chicago. As it turned out, five people were inside the house: Four siblings ages 1, 6, 13 and 18, and another 13-year-old who was sleeping over.

Bostic was able to get in through a back door, yelling to see if anyone inside could hear him. His shouting woke up the eldest sibling, who in turn was able to wake up the two younger teens and grab her 1-year-old sister before Bostic led them outside to safety.

“For a minute I didn’t understand it, but my sister ran upstairs with the baby in her hands and yelling at us to get up because there’s a fire,” 13-year-old Shaylee Barrett told the Purdue Exponent. “And for a minute I froze and I laid there because I was confused. That’s when we went downstairs and Nick was downstairs helping us.”

But one child hadn’t made it out yet.

“I asked them if anybody was left in there ― and that’s when they told me that the 6-year-old was,” Bostic told ABC 7 Chicago.

He went back inside, searching different rooms, under beds and in closets through what he described to journalist Dave Bangert as a “lagoon of smoke.”

“I don’t know how to explain it, but it was like I accepted I was going to probably die, right there, that night,” he said in an interview published on the journalist’s Substack. “But it was a weird calm. You just got to work as fast as you can.”

He eventually found the girl and carried her out, punching through a window to get out of the home that was becoming engulfed in flames.

Police video from the scene shows Bostic dropping to the ground after the rescue, exclaiming that he needs oxygen and asking, “Is the baby OK?”

The fire department believes that the fire started due to ashes that had been emptied into a bucket on the porch before they were fully extinguished, the Lafayette Journal & Courier reported.

The children’s parents, David and Tiera Barrett, had gone out for a date night and returned to find their burning home surrounded by emergency vehicles. Both expressed immense gratitude to their community and to Bostic.

“I literally told him he’s now part of our family,” David Barrett told the Exponent. “And he was all on board with it. Once we get settled someplace, we’re going to invite him over and his girlfriend for dinner.”

The police department called Bostic’s actions “nothing short of courageous and heroic” and the city will be honoring him at an upcoming Lafayette Aviators baseball game, where ticket sales with the code FUND2022 will be going to help fund Bostic’s medical expenses. A Facebook fundraiser that Bostic confirmed on his own page was legitimate had raised more than $21,000 as of Saturday.

Bostic has downplayed his own heroism.

“Like I keep saying, it’s not like I’m some superstar hero,” he told Bangert. “I was at the right place, the right time, and, I guess, the right person.”
 

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The guy ended up with burns on his hand/arm and back, severe cuts on his arm from the broken glass, bruising on his side from the second-story fall, and severe smoke inhalation that required him to initially be put on a respirator at the hospital. He's been released now and is doing fine. The children were all fine other than minor smoke inhalation and a minor cut on the last girl's foot.

I looked up a little of his background and he seems like he's had a tough life. Father abandoned him for another family, mostly has unstable low-pay employment, alludes to mental health issues. But on that night he was a hero and that family's future is completely changed because of him.


Reminded me of these two young brehs I posted about a while back.

 

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That GoFundMe is going to be lit :ohlawd:


Yeah, their goal for hospital costs was just $100k but the GoFundMe is over $300k. And I think one of his other friends created another one that has a few grand too. Lifeflight can be incredibly expensive but that and the stay are probably already covered easily and I can even see the hospital potentially waiving the costs considered how he got the injuries, so he's gonna be somewhat better off financially now. I hope he's wise with the money, what a way to interrupt your struggles.




Saw some pics on his Facebook too, he really is hanging out with the family he saved now and they seem to all be loving each other.
 

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I looked up a little of his background and he seems like he's had a tough life. Father abandoned him for another family, mostly has unstable low-pay employment, alludes to mental health issues. But on that night he was a hero and that family's future is completely changed because of him.


Reminded me of these two young brehs I posted about a while back.

Man had a tough life, but it didnt stop him from risking his life to save others.

Love hearing stories of ppl doing good things even though they had a tough life, instead of hearing stories of ppl doing bad things and ppl making excuses as to why
 

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wow the luck of him driving by at that time


Like the firefighter said, he could have been just two minutes later and that family could have lost everyone.

Not gonna minimize what a hard time that family must be going through, they lost their home and fukking everything in it. Doesn't look like they got a single possession out. So they gotta be mourning their losses big time. But the difference between getting out with your family intact and what coulda happened is wild, they gonna be thanking God for that. In fact on the things I saw on Facebook was that all of them (the family in the house and Nick too) went to church together afterwards.
 

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Yeah, their goal for hospital costs was just $100k but the GoFundMe is over $300k. And I think one of his other friends created another one that has a few grand too. Lifeflight can be incredibly expensive but that and the stay are probably already covered easily and I can even see the hospital potentially waiving the costs considered how he got the injuries, so he's gonna be somewhat better off financially now. I hope he's wise with the money, what a way to interrupt your struggles.




Saw some pics on his Facebook too, he really is hanging out with the family he saved now and they seem to all be loving each other.

dude deserves every cent what a hero
 
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