Real Life Hero; Unidentified man Saves woman from oncoming train

The Witch

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A mysterious good Samaritan saved a young woman from being crushed by an L train in Union Square after she fainted and tumbled onto the tracks Monday, police said Tuesday.

The hero courageously jumped onto the tracks and made a nick-of-time rescue after Brooklyn photographer Jessica Oshita, 26, fell suddenly Monday night.

"I think this whole thing is a miracle," Oshita's mother, Sue Oshita, told the Daily News from her home in Hawaii. "He is a guardian angel."

Oshita's fall left her unconscious and lying face-down on the tracks, blood pouring from her head. The hero had little time to rescue her - perhaps less than a minute, one witness said - but he was cool under pressure.

He first tried to lift Oshita onto the platform, police sources said, citing accounts provided by at least two witnesses.

But before he could pull off the rescue, he heard the rumbling of the oncoming Manhattan-bound train and was forced to make a split-second switch to Plan B.

It proved to be a life-saver.

As the train approached, the hero placed Oshita's body in the well between the rails and then quickly hoisted himself onto the platform, the sources said.

The hero - described by cops only as a black man - then disappeared quietly into the night.

"He has not been identified," a police source said last night.

Ana Mercedes Cardenas, a Manhattan lawyer, was on the opposite platform, waiting for a Brooklyn-bound L train, when Oshita fell.

"I saw the woman face down on the rails," Cardenas said, noting blood was pooling on the tracks. "It was shocking to see."

Cardenas, 26, said she saw someone move like they were going to jump down from the platform, but the person hesitated. She said she did not see anyone go down onto the tracks, but added she had stepped back, frightened by the sight of so much blood.

Many straphangers waiting on the platform apparently didn't see the man's heroics, either. When the sound of the oncoming train was heard, Cardenas said people began "yelling and screaming," believing they were about to witness a tragedy.

"The train started coming, everybody just looked at the track and started waving their hands, screaming: 'Stop! Stop! Stop!'" Cardenas recalled. "But the train didn't stop."

Five subway cars rolled over Oshita, police said. She suffered three facial lacerations requiring stitches, and remained in stable condition at Bellevue Hospital yesterday.

"She's fine," Oshita's mother said, adding that the young shutterbug's father was flying to New York to be with his daughter.

The hero's bravery was reminiscent of the lifesaving actions of Wesley Autrey, the construction worker who saved a man who had a seizure on a subway track in 2007. Autrey threw himself over the man and held him in the well between the rails as the No. 1 train passed by.

Oshita's mother hopes her daughter's savior will not remain anonymous. "I do wish that somebody would find him," she said.

-Source-

Okay, I just liked hearing a story from New York that's uplifting. It's nice to hear of people being brave and risking their lives for others.

Oh, and people are saying this guy looks like Hancock, by the way. I'm not so sure, but...
hancock-posterbig-trl.jpg
 
Thats kick ass man, I would have been the one filming it or taking photo's of the hero :wacky: Just me though, eh?
 
It's good to know that there is good people out there;

The woman was very lucky he was there to save her.

And yeah.... Thats what first came to my mind too-- Hancock at least in a way.


And I agree it is rather uplifting to see that he risked his life for someone else 'tis takes a lot of courage and willpower.

=]
 
good to know. most likely he wanted to stay anonymous for fear of being prosecuted should they try to nab money off of him (there are many who would do this). there's such a stigma in the big cities that touching others is FORBIDDEN and can and will be punished, directly or indirectly (dirty looks, et al).
 
I'm more intersted inwhere he put the body exactly?

If some guy did the same thing 3 years ago.....is it a design fault or an intentional place to place people having fallen on the tracks, assuming that in such an incident you would more than likely have to be unconscious to be down there in the first place.

Coz if you think about it it would bloody hurt to fall on to freakin train track.......in Australia recentley there have been 2 incidents of occupied prams/strollers fallinfg onto tracks and the toddlers survived, supposedly unscathed.

When the train was coming coming no less.......make me wonder if the presence of some kind of other world spirit type'o'thing is goin on......:hmmm:
 
there's a space between the tracks large enough for a person to fit in. it was likely designed intentionally for incidents like this. the woman was reportedly bleeding a lot from falling into the track.
 
I thought he looked like someone, but I couldnt place him! Wow, it really does do my soul good to hear how people do this. A persons life is in the path of death and a complete stranger will come to their aid. Amazing man, what an amazing man.
 
i wonder why the guy fled the scene, maybe he has warrants out. idk but hes a hero! and the drawing looks so much like hancock. lol
 
If he was a criminal, why would he risk helping her? Maybe hes one of those loner types who doesnt like attention perhaps.
 
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