 wind up possible from the middle of the way, right where I am. Push left to me. Can you get me in the safety field? 130. Give this to him. Call the 9-9 now. I'm calling if it's safe. Yeah, is that what you're going to do? I'm sorry. This is 1-6 Romeo. Training in our line to follow. Over. For distance. I'm sorry. This is 1-6 Romeo. Training in our line to follow. Yeah. 1-1. Do you have the casualty out there yet? Are you good? I'm not sure. I'm going to go through the program. So if you're not switching over to battalion that, I'm going to put you on. And that's Cali-Vent. It's an event where there's multiple casualties happening at the same time. Usually these casualties will be brought to a casualty collection point or CCP. And we will go to these CCP's and bring back these casualties to the battalion aid station to triage and treat these casualties based on the acuity of their injury or their wound. What's going on here? Do a full assessment on him please. Have you been back there? Hey, did you run the first litter? Specialist nobody, specialist nobody? Yeah. We experienced a mass casualty event on one of our lanes. Our company took fire. Our line medics reacted. reacted. We dispatched in ambulance after getting their grid coordinates and when they got back here we triaged, treated and then evaced back to the higher echelon of care. I think everyone performed great. Nobody was running into each other, the communication was great. We really mastered that closed loop communication on the treatment tables. Medications were being given, blood was hung. Those are all higher level skills that take a lot of communication and our evac was safe. All the litters, all the carries were safe. They were strapped in correctly so starting from the lowest down like safety was our priority and I think that we definitely executed that.