『Heroic Rescue and Severe Storm Cleanup: Fort Worth Local Pulse Update』のカバーアート

Heroic Rescue and Severe Storm Cleanup: Fort Worth Local Pulse Update

Heroic Rescue and Severe Storm Cleanup: Fort Worth Local Pulse Update

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Good morning, this is Fort Worth Local Pulse for Saturday, October 26th, 2025.

We start this morning with a story that's captured hearts across the nation. Just two days ago on Thursday morning around 9:30, Fort Worth police officers Sergeant R Nichols and Officer E Bounds responded to a devastating crash on Interstate 30 near Eastchase Parkway. A red Hyundai Veloster had flipped completely over, ejecting a mother and her one year old daughter onto the grassy shoulder. What happened next was nothing short of miraculous. Body camera footage released by the Fort Worth Police Department shows the officers sprinting toward the overturned vehicle as the mother's desperate cries for her baby filled the air. Officer Nichols quickly realized the infant was trapped underneath the car and rallied bystanders who had stopped to help. Together, they lifted the vehicle just enough for the officer to pull the baby out by her legs. The child was unresponsive, but officers immediately began chest compressions and CPR. After tense moments captured on video, the baby began to make sounds and eventually cry. Both mother and child were rushed to the hospital and are now expected to make full recoveries. Police Chief Eddie Garcia called the rescued child a little angel and praised the officers and Good Samaritans for their heroism. The dramatic rescue video has been viewed over 130,000 times, with thousands praising the quick thinking and bravery of everyone involved.

In other developments around the city, we're dealing with cleanup from Friday night's severe storms. High winds hit the southern part of Fort Worth particularly hard, with significant damage reported on Todd Avenue just east of Interstate 35. While the National Weather Service confirmed no tornado touched down, the storms knocked over trees, damaged roofs and sheds, and left power lines down across neighborhoods. Over 260,000 customers across Texas woke up Saturday morning without power. Residents have been working hard to clean up debris, though more rain today is complicating those efforts.

In city government news, there's ongoing controversy at the Fort Worth Fire Department. Former Fire Chief Jim Davis resigned on October 17th after being placed on paid administrative leave. His attorney released a statement accusing the Fort Worth Professional Firefighters Association Local 440 of contributing to unsafe working conditions and retaliating against Davis for requesting an independent federal safety review. The union had completed a no confidence vote against Davis, citing failures in safety enforcement. Assistant Chief Raymond Hill is serving as interim chief while the city searches for a permanent replacement.

As we continue through this rainy Saturday, expect more showers throughout the day with potential for street flooding in areas that saw damage last night.

Thank you for tuning in to Fort Worth Local Pulse. Be sure to subscribe so you never miss an update on what's happening in our community. This has been Fort Worth Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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