Pizza delivery man rescues children from burning house in Indiana - GulfToday

Pizza delivery man rescues children from burning house in Indiana

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A videograb shows massive fire devouring enitre house in Indiana.

Gulf Today Report

An American pizza delivery man has been hailed as a hero after he stormed into a burning building and rescued four children and jumped out with a fifth from a window in Lafayette, Indiana.

The pizza delivery has been identified as Nicholas Bostic, 25. The man was passing through the neighborhood around midnight on July 11 when he saw the house on fire. Bostic escaped with severe burns in his body.

The Lafayette Police said, “On July 11th, 2022, at approximately 12:30 am, the Lafayette Police Department and Lafayette Fire Department received reports of a house fire in the 2200 block of Union Street. When officers arrived, the house was fully engulfed in flames, and the intensity of the fire prevented emergency personnel from entering the residence.

Information was gathered that a 6-year-old child was possibly still inside the home, and personnel began hasty attempt to combat the fire to attempt a rescue.

At approximately 12:36 am, a male, who had entered the home prior to emergency personnel arriving, jumped through a window of the second-storey house and landed on the ground with the 6-year-old child who had been trapped inside.

The male, later identified as 25-year-old Nicholas Bostic of Lafayette, was seriously injured during the incident- suffering from severe smoke inhalation and gravely cutting his right arm. The 6-year-old child was miraculously mostly uninjured.

Nicholas's injuries required that he be flown to Indianapolis for treatment, but recovered.

The Police said Nicholas walked us through the incident describing it to us in detail. What he described was nothing short of courageous and heroic.

Nicholas happened to be driving by the 2200 block of Union Street when he noticed a house on fire.

He immediately stopped in the roadway, threw his car in reverse, turned around, and pulled into the driveway. He didn't want to waste time trying to find someone who could call 911.

He knew he had to act. He ran around to the back of the home and was able to open the back door. He began yelling inside, attempting to alert the occupants that the house was on fire. He didn't receive an answer and contemplated the possibility that everyone had already evacuated.

Not taking the chance that someone could still be inside, he decided to go in. He walked through the house, calling out the danger, and eventually made his way up the stairs.

There he found four kids, ranging in age from 1 to 18. His yells of warning roused them from their sleep, and he helped them escape from the house.

Once they were outside, Nicholas learned about the six-year-old still being inside the home. Without hesitation, he ran back into the burning house. Not knowing where the child was, he went to the last place. He frantically searched the rooms, even looking under the beds, but it was to no avail.

He started down the stairs but was immediately turned back. He described looking down the stairwell into a "black lagoon" of smoke and thought it impossible to go that way. He moved to a window to exit the house when he heard a child's cry coming from downstairs.

Nicholas said he knew he was there to get that child out and even though the fire and smoke downstairs frightened him he would not quit.

Nicholas wrapped his shirt around his mouth and nose and plunged into the blackness. He described it as so black that he couldn't see anything in front of him and the heat from the fire made it seem as if he was walking into an oven. Nicholas crawled on the ground, feeling in front of him with his hands and used the child's cries to help him locate in the darkness.

Once he had her, he attempted to recall from memory where the back door was, but he couldn't find it. However, Nicholas was able to find his way back to the stairs. He ran up the stairs carrying the child and broke open a window by punching it with his bare hand.

In his haste, the child's leg became entangled in a cord to the blinds. Nicholas recognized that he was rushing and calmed himself down. He untangled the string and jumped from the window, ensuring he landed on the side where he was not holding the child. He picked himself up off the ground and carried the girl to safety.

The Lafayette Police Department said Nicholas will be honored on Aug.2 during National Night Out at the Aviators game.

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