Car fire on I 95 Orange, CT

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
47,052
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Dec 13, 2009

Car accident where car catches fire on I 95 between exits 41 and 42 in Orange, CT near New Haven. December 12, 2009.

Firefighting, Rescue, EMS - Training for Firefighters, Firefighter Jobs, EMS, Rescue - Extrication, HazMat, Paramedic, Tactics
Home
Off-Duty N.Y. FF Saves Woman From Car Fire on Conn. Highway

By Richard Weizel STAFF WRITER

Posted: Tue, 12/15/2009 - 03:14
Updated: Tue, 12/15/2009 - 03:32

A veteran New York City firefighter on his way home from Mohegan Sun is being credited with rescuing an Old Lyme woman from a fiery car wreck Saturday afternoon on Interstate-95, just as the 2003 Volkswagen Beetle became engulfed in flames.

Vincent Sottile, 38, of Lindenhurst, New York who works in Ladder 167 in the Flushing part of Queens, thought he had the day off Saturday and was making a leisurely ride back home from the Uncasville casino with his wife, Joanne.

But what happened next, at about 4 p.m, turned out to be "the most dramatic rescue I have ever made" during a 20-year career as a volunteer and paid firefighter, Sottile said.

When he saw a car on fire on the northbound side of I-95, he stopped his car on the southbound highway's left shoulder. Then, donning his own fire gear - which just happened to be in the car -- jumped over an I-95 barrier just north of Exit 41 in Orange to pull the woman, trapped, semi-conscious and surrounded by flames, out of her burning car.

Others who frantically tried to help the woman were forced back by the flames, but Sottile said he was able to reach into the burning vehicle and pull out 56-year-old Janice Valliancourt.

"She was on fire with smoke coming from her body and would have been dead in another minute," Sottile said. "The state trooper on the scene was completely dazed from being involved in the multi-car accident and I was forced to go into his (cruiser's) trunk and take the flares to shut down the interstate. I couldn't believe what was happening." He credits the trapped woman's heavily leathered boots with saving her from far more serious injury. "The boots were up past her knees, and were crispy and badly charred. But they protected her from having much more serious burns." Sottile said he would never have been able to rescue the woman if he didn't have his gear to protect him from the raging flames.

"It just makes the story that much more amazing because I'm just happened to have been on an assignment in another firehouse the day before we left, and I'm threw my gear in," he said. "Ordinarily, I would not have had all of that with me." A nursing supervisor at Yale-New Haven Hospital said Valliancourt was listed in fair condition about 4 p.m. Sunday.

Several other people involved in the multi-car accident that led to a massive traffic-back-up on I-95, were treated and released at Yale New Haven Hospital, and from several other area hospitals.

Initial media reports that the state trooper had pulled the woman from the car are unfounded, according to Sottile, his wife Joanne and a spokesman for the FDNY.

While Lt. Paul Lt. J. Paul Vance, state police spokesman, could not be reached for comment Sunday, he had indicated to media outlets Saturday that the trooper was the one who made his way to the burning car, cut the female driver's seatbelt and rescued her from the car.

"I was there the whole time and my husband is the only one who got that woman out of the car," Joanne Sottile said.

State police have indicated a state trooper was investigating an accident near Exit 41 when a car hit his cruiser, which then crashed into him. The car that hit the cruiser then caught on fire, which then spread to another car at the scene. The officer was out of his car investigating when the Volkswagen traveling in the left lane struck the rear of his cruiser and threw him into another stopped car, police said.

The State Police Accident Reconstruction Unit is assisting in the investigation.

Jim Long, director of public information for FDNY in Brooklyn, said the city is aware of Sottile's actions and plans to present him with some kind of citation.

"We spoke with firefighter Sottile and he gave us a full account of what occurred, but he's a little humble about it," Long said. "He knew something had to be done at the scene and acted accordingly to assist someone in need, and we are very proud of his actions. He acted in the best traditions of the FDNY and fire service in general. It's another example of someone from the FDNY doing something heroic."

Category:

Autos & Vehicles

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 4 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Top Comments

  • @dixiewife47 The accident was caused by cranial rectal inversion, also known as driving with your head up your ass.

  • So your that big black bus?

see all

All Comments (135)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Damn you can cook hotdogs on that fire, anyone?

  • this is awesome, two different videos of the same thing from different perspectives. this just blew my mind, AND THAT CAR BAHAHAHA.....i have no friends...

  • The sound of someone eating a bag of chips in the background from about 4:30 into the video kind of gives this video a different perspective.

  • theres also video b4 the fire n ems arrive look it up

    

  • non driving idiots

  • i just love how im watching this vid and i look at the ad above the related vids and its was an ask.com ad say What is the fastest car in the world....... 0.o

  • did the cars color burn off then did it catch onto the other car if it did rip who ever got caught

  • @67Joakim You can't take one incident like this and lump ALL emergency services across America together. That's pretty ignorant. This is ONE incident. I've seen incidences in Germany (when I lived there for 10 years) take twice as long as this, and saw an accident here in America where EMS came in under 10 minutes. It all depends on the location. This part of the highway is far away from larger towns with hospitals and whatnot.

  • Damm, That Buggy is not giving up

  • Looking at all clips of this...us emergencyservice is the worst in the world...so slow and not the right behavior to the wonded lady...so low...US woooohaaa...NOT

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more