 I was just going to the child hall to get some breakfast and we hear the Marine in 7 Charlie call up, a woman was just run over by a car. On that day I was a guard duty officer. Once I realized that all the Marines had a job, myself and Corporal Bowen moved to coming over the plan to get the car up. From there, I just know we have to get the car off of her so I go to the trunk of the car, myself and another Marine grabbed the jack out from the trunk. Corporal Bowen moved to get a jack from outside of the trunk of the car that was on the woman and I moved over to a civilian who actually had stopped to help us and grabbed his jack. And as soon as I grabbed the tire iron, I started jacking the car up from the rear and Staff Sergeant Belko proceeds the run over to a civilian's car, grabbed their jack from their vehicle and then start jacking up the front of the car. By the time we had a jacked up, fire and EMS were already on scene, they pulled their out from underneath and we just kind of handed the scene over to them and just went into crowd control and we're there for whenever they needed us. When you first pull up to the scene like that, your mind's racing because the rarity of someone actually being trapped under the vehicle is pretty rare, but she was actually trapped. We saw her entrapped as we pulled up and you start initially thinking about what you need to do to get her out, what kind of tools in your game plan before you can assess her. I think honestly their actions were integral to reducing the amount of time it took for us to take care of that victim. They had the scissor jack out and we're already working on lifting the car off the victim. That allowed us to come in and move the victim out and start getting an assessment a lot quicker. The immediate feeling was just relief. Once I just informed all the guys, they were all just felt the exact same, just absolutely relieved that she made it out okay and we were just happy to get the good news. Honestly, if they hadn't done what they have done, it could have delayed care for that patient. We're always taught in the fire service when we talk about EMS and trauma care that getting those victims after doing a proper assessment, getting them to the right place quickly and they absolutely helped us do that that day. It made me feel great, but I knew that it wasn't just us. It was a direct team effort. We had neighbors that come, passerbys had stopped to help. We had fire and EMS come and Marines run to the sound of the gun. So it didn't surprise me at all that the Marines were there.