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Brave Bus Driver Leaps to Catch 7-Year-Old Girl Falling From 3-Story Window (VIDEO)

by Jacqueline Burt on July 17, 2012 at 1:26 PM

girl falls 3 floorsTalk about being in the right place at the right time. Fifty-two-year-old Stephen St. Bernard, an MTA bus driver from Brooklyn, just happened to be walking home when he heard shouts coming from a crowd of people gathered outside his apartment building, pointing at a window three stories overhead. He looked up and saw a little girl standing on an air-conditioning unit, moving around, "seemingly unafraid." St. Bernard, on the other hand, was afraid. He knew what was going to happen next.

"I just prayed that I'd catch her," he said later.

"'Please let me catch her, please let me catch her.' That's all I could say."

And because every so often, life imitates one of those feel-good, fairy tale, miracles really do happen type movies ...

He did! Stephen St. Bernard DID catch the 7-year-old girl as she fell from that air conditioning unit three stories above. And the whole thing was caught on tape!

"I picked her up and carried her ... She kept looking around. She never closed her eyes. She never lost consciousness."

Yeah, thanks to YOU she never lost consciousness! According to neighbors, the autistic girl, named Keyla, apparently pushed the unit's plastic accordion partitions to the side to climb outside and on to the air conditioner. (Thank god the whole thing didn't come tumbling down!!)

The scariest part -- to me and probably most other moms, anyway -- is that Keyla's mother was actually in the apartment when she climbed out the window but was distracted taking care of her other child and didn't notice. (And if you have more than one child, you KNOW how easily this could happen to anyone.)

Anyway, thankfully Keyla suffered only very minor injuries, while St. Bernard tore a tendon in his shoulder ("a small price to pay," he says).

Phew! I guess we can all exhale now. And the moral of the story is ... childproof your windows, even if you think you don't have to, because Stephen St. Bernard is clearly out of commission for a while.

Does this story scare you? Inspire you? Or both?

Filed Under: autism, in the news, safety

Comments

21
  • Benja...
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    Benjamins-mama

    July 17, 2012 at 1:36 PM

    not just fireproof your windows but you know actually pay attention to where your child is would also work too.   I mean how did that girls parents not realize their child was standing on the window ac unit?   how did she get out onto it in the first place and them not notice?    thankfully that man was there to catch her otherwise she could have been killed due to her parents not paying attention


  • bills...
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    billsfan1104

    July 17, 2012 at 1:36 PM
    That mother should do the minimum and at least pay for his out of pocket medical bills. Thank God for him.
  • tiny_...
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    tiny_mama

    July 17, 2012 at 1:50 PM

    God bless that man, God bless that little girl, and God bless anyone who judges that mother without walking in her shoes! o.O


  • Rach
    -- Nonmember comment from

    Rach

    July 17, 2012 at 2:18 PM
    Please don't judge this mother; I work with autistic children and it is difficult; they are not typical and often have NO fear (or can't express fear in the same way, it's up for debate). No human (mother or otherwise) can watch another human being 24/7, it is NOT POSSIBLE! Should she not sleep? Should she not care for her other children? Should she not pee, for God's sake? Can you imagine having a 7 year old girl (not a 2year old, 7!) who is not afraid of walking on an AC unit, 3 stories up? Thank God she is okay, and believe me this mother is kicking herself right now, for being human, for making a mistake in not properly securing her window, and not being able to never takes her eyes off her little girl (you know the human part I mentioned before?)!
  • Jordana
    -- Nonmember comment from

    Jordana

    July 17, 2012 at 2:21 PM
    I am so sick of the judgement.

    My 11 year old son has severe autism. I try my very hardest every single day to keep him safe, but it is a full time job. If you don't live with autism and the exhausting difficulties that come along with it, you don't know. Autistic children have no fear, and no sense of danger. We are only human and I am sure this mother never thought for a second her child would push aside the plastic accordion piece around the air unit and crawl out the window. She may have went into another room for 5 minutes and this could happen. My son is also a climber and my home is locked down like a prison to keep him from eloping, but this could be ME. I'm a good mother, but these children are an entirely different experience. Have some empathy for what mothers like her are up against every day instead of immediately judging.
  • Lauri...
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    Lauriemom

    July 17, 2012 at 2:25 PM

    Amen Jackie!!  Our kids can be so damn quick, it's scary as hell!! 


  • Jordana
    -- Nonmember comment from

    Jordana

    July 17, 2012 at 2:31 PM
    Thank you, Rach. It is nice to read a comment from someone who gets it. This story made me cry because I know it could be my child.
  • CPN322
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    CPN322

    July 17, 2012 at 2:56 PM

    Wow, are any of you people that are judging so harshly the parent of an autistic kid?? No, then shut up. I'm sorry, I can't be nice about that. You have NO idea what you are talking about. Ausitic children aren't like other children. They are very curious and a lot of them are very quick. I'm sure this childs mother is beside herself!! SO thankful that man was there and that this story had a happy ending!! I'm sure they will be taking every step necessary to ensure there house is sealed up tight.


  • CPN322
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    CPN322

    July 17, 2012 at 2:59 PM

    *I know children in general are curious, but your average child is fearful of what they should be fearful of so their curiousity isn't quite the same.


  • JoJo_H
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    JoJo_H

    July 17, 2012 at 3:28 PM
    If you have a child with autism your heart stopped when you read this story. Mine did, as it does every time I read one of these stories. It is incredibly isolating to parent a child with classic autism. Protecting your child also takes on a whole new meaning as they have no fear. Something like this can happen in minutes, while you are brushing your teeth and your child is watching Elmo in the other room. if you don't have an autistic child or have spent considerable time with one you really have no idea what we are up against.
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