Texarkana Gazette

Off-duty officers spring into action, saving lives

- By Amy Taxin and Josh Hoffner

SANTA ANA, Calif.—Fred Rowbotham’s plan was to leave job stress behind with a trip to Las Vegas to celebrate his 45th birthday at the Route 91 Harvest country music festival.

But when the rat-a-tat-tat of gunfire rained down, the police officer from Chula Vista, California, sprang into action as if he were in uniform. Joining him were many other off-duty police and firefighte­rs in the terrified crowd of 20,000.

“Cops and firefighte­rs like country music. They like a good time. They like to go to Vegas and cut loose,” Rowbotham said. After rushing his wife to safety, he turned to help others. “You have to just act sometimes.”

The rampage by a heavily armed gunman perched in the nearby Mandalay Bay casino hotel killed 58 people and left nearly 500 injured, but it could have been deadlier without the quick thinking and tactical skills of officers who took charge, treated the wounded and directed paramedics to the most urgent victims.

Without their expertise, more people could have died, said Dr. Douglas Fraser, vice chief of trauma at University Medical Center of Southern Nevada, where many of the wounded were treated.

“It was very helpful to have people who were off-duty or medically trained there,” said Fraser, noting that a victim with a major injury to an artery can die in minutes. “It’s invaluable to be able to apply direct pressure to a wound or be able to place a tourniquet instead of watching someone bleed to death.”

Rowbotham said his instincts took over. He got pelted by shrapnel and was bleeding but unfazed as he directed dozens of people to safety.

Several other officers and firefighte­rs were also hit, including Mike Kordich, a firefighte­r from Rancho Cucamonga, California. He was giving CPR to a badly wounded person when he was struck in the arm by a bullet.

“I kept doing chest compressio­ns with one arm until I noticed I was starting to bleed a lot,” Kordich recalled. He ran for cover, jumping fences, and said

he could hear the bullets whizzing by.

San Diego police officer Tom McGrath said he threw himself on top of strangers to shield them. He treated the wounded, taking his shirt off to apply pressure to a woman’s bleeding chest. For another gunshot victim, he made a tourniquet from a scarf and tree branch.

“It was almost automatic to go from enjoying the concert to that person needs help,” McGrath told reporters Wednesday at San Diego police headquarte­rs. “I think it’s something that just kind of gets ingrained in you. The switch flipped at that point.”

President Donald Trump visited Las Vegas on Wednesday and paid tribute to the first responders and doctors who rushed to save lives.

“While everyone else was crouching, police officers were standing up as targets just trying to direct people and tell them where to go,” Trump said. “Words cannot describe the bravery the whole world witnessed Sunday night.”

Bruce Ure, a deputy police chief from Seguin, Texas, shrugged off kudos and said he was just doing his job.

“I was ready to go. I knew it needed to be done because I had been trained in that,” said Ure, who spotted a man bleeding from a leg wound and dragged him to safety, then used the man’s belt to make a tourniquet.

Bullets were still raining down when he helped two other women, one shot in the back and one shot in the chest, by commandeer­ing a vehicle and directing the driver to a nearby trauma center.

That night, Ure said, he saw America “at its finest and at its worst.”

 ?? AP Photo/Denis Poroy ?? Chula Vista police officer Fred Rowbotham stands next to his motorcycle Thursday in Chula Vista, Calif. Rowbotham was injured at the Las Vegas shooting while attending the concert with his wife and friends. The Sunday night crowd of about 20,000...
AP Photo/Denis Poroy Chula Vista police officer Fred Rowbotham stands next to his motorcycle Thursday in Chula Vista, Calif. Rowbotham was injured at the Las Vegas shooting while attending the concert with his wife and friends. The Sunday night crowd of about 20,000...

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