'You're fired,' man hears after saving a woman's life (with shotgun)

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gunsmith

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I post links and story, you should too noob!

http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/061807/met_178250725.shtml

I looked and didn't see this up here! are you guys sleeping or something?
or did I plain miss it?


'You're fired,' man hears after saving a woman's life

The 24-year-old grabbed a gun before going to help his neighbor who had been shot.


By Jim Schoettler, The Times-Union

When a neighbor screamed she'd been shot, Colin Bruley grabbed his shotgun, found the victim and began treating her bloodied right leg.



Tonnetta Lee survived Tuesday's pre-dawn shooting at her Jacksonville apartment, and her sister and a neighbor praised Bruley's actions. But his employers, the same people who own the Arlington complex where Bruley lives, reacted differently. They fired him.

Bruley, a leasing agent at the Oaks at Mill Creek, said he lost his job after being told that brandishing the weapon was a workplace violation, as was failing to notify supervisors after the incident occurred. He'd worked at the Monument Road complex since December and for the owner, Village Green Cos., since 2005.

Bruley said he was too shaken to call his supervisor immediately after the incident, which occurred just before 2 a.m., but planned to eventually do so. He also said he was acting as a citizen, not an employee, and shouldn't have been punished for trying to protect himself and others. He never fired the shotgun.

"I was expecting work to give me some kind of commendation," said Bruley, 24. "I was totally blown back. It was a crisis that most people don't go through."

Andrea Roebker, the company's director of public relations, said "We're not in a position to discuss any employment issues outside of [with] the employee.

She declined to comment further, citing confidentiality rules.

A complaint Bruley said was given to him by his supervisor Tuesday said he violated several company policies found in an employee handbook. Those procedures were also explained in a recent meeting and an e-mail, the complaint said. One policy prohibits any type of weapons being used in the workplace. The complaint cited him for "gross misconduct."

"Colin demonstrated extremely poor judgment in responding to this situation," the complaint said. "Colin's failure to immediately report this incident ... could have serious ramifications to the property, its associates and residents."

A police report said the shooting followed a domestic quarrel involving Lee, 24, and her boyfriend. Bruley said he was dozing off in his apartment when he heard Lee's screams. He said he then grabbed a 12-gauge shotgun he uses for protection and hunting.

Bruley said he found the woman bleeding heavily. He handed the shotgun to a neighbor, tied a tourniquet around her right leg and waited for police and rescue to arrive.

"I was kind of in a state of shock. I had blood all over my body," Bruley said.

After emergency officials took Lee to the hospital, Bruley returned to his apartment and tried to settle down, eventually falling asleep. He said he could have called his supervisor but didn't think she could do anything at the time. He said he was called into the office about 9:30 a.m., gave his account and then left. He said he was called back that afternoon and told he was fired.

Neighbor Kevin Courson joined Bruley at the crime scene when he saw Bruley had a gun for protection. Courson said he is incensed by the dismissal.

"Here was a guy trying to do a good deed. He wasn't trying to hurt nobody," said Courson, 31.

Erica Jenkins, Lee's sister, said Bruley should still have a job. Lee couldn't be reached to comment despite several messages left with her sister and mother.

"If it wasn't for him ... she could have lost her leg or died," said Jenkins, 19. "He put his life in jeopardy for someone else."

Bruley said he is considering contacting a lawyer about his dismissal, but will first look for another job and possibly another home. He promises he won't shy away from aiding others in need.

"If I'd lose my job again for helping some girl's life ... I'd do it over and over," Bruley said.

[email protected], (904) 359-4385
 
a tourniquet!

tied a tourniquet around her right leg and waited for police and rescue to arrive.

Some one needs to update their first aid out of the 1950's!
did he make her bite a bullet?
"If it wasn't for him ... she could have lost her leg or died," said Jenkins, 19.
Or because of him!
"Here was a guy trying to do a good deed. He wasn't trying to hurt nobody," said Courson, 31.

ok everyone, all together now!
NO GOOD DEED GOES UNPUNISHED!
 
Or because of him!
Tourniquet is still a valid technique if it comes down to losing the limb or your life. I've been told its being advised in Iraq again, though that's second hand information.

In any case, the guy saved her. ;) works for me.
 
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I'm trying to understand what this guy did for work . He was in his apartment dozing off and still "on the clock" ? Was it his own personal time or is he considered "working" 24/7 ?

Kudos for him though for stepping up and helping the woman . Black marks for the company on the other hand for firing the guy .
 
Probably a maintenance guy for the apartment complex.

And tourniquets are very effective if done properly for short term bleeding control. Obviously if you leave it on for hours you are going to compromise the limb.
 
Tourniquet is still a valid technique if it comes down to losing the limb or your life. I've been told its being advised in Iraq again, though that's second hand information.

In any case, the guy saved her. works for me.

Ive'd used them in Iraq to the salvation of both the life and the limb!

And tourniquets are very effective if done properly for short term bleeding control. Obviously if you leave it on for hours you are going to compromise the limb.

Exactly, a good tool if used properly.
 
I think someone should start picketing the apartment complex, and find a competing apartment complex who believes in the rights of it's tenants to allow anyone to leave the bad apartments and move into theirs cheaper for the first year.

What happened is the ultimate in customer dis-service. "We don't support anyone saving your life while you're in our apartment complex." kinda leaves a bad taste in my mouth.

The apartment owners Son is probably just getting his 2 year degree in apartment management, so the owner is probably just making room for his kid to have a career or something. It seems like these kinds of BS reasons are what cause 'good' employees to get fired.... that or the fella who got fired was making more than they could replace him for.
 
Bruley, a leasing agent at the Oaks at Mill Creek, said he lost his job after being told that brandishing the weapon was a workplace violation, as was failing to notify supervisors after the incident occurred.
The guy was a leasing agent at the property.

I hope there is litigation on this as many apartment complex employees live at the complex for which they work, and some are required to live there. I could understand if he is "on the clock" but if he is on his own time those rules shouldn't apply. It's like saying that he can't drink at work, and since he lives at work that means he can't drink in his own home.

Just my .02 USD.

No employer should have the right to tell somebody they can't go armed on company property. Sorry, but my right to self preservation (right to life) supersedes any private property rights. I still find it sad that some people would even think otherwise.
 
Some one needs to update their first aid out of the 1950's!
did he make her bite a bullet?

Not everyone knows where the pressure points are; in such cases I'll take a tourniquet over nothing at all.

Also hard to fight off bad guys when you've got both hands putting pressure on the femoral...
 
Some one needs to update their first aid out of the 1950's!
did he make her bite a bullet?

Actually, in certain situations, especially those involving otherwise untrained personnel, tourniquets are quite efficacious in their limited purpose. I wouldn't be so quick to dismiss them, speaking from experience.
 
Hmm I stand corrected I guess

I just took a Red Cross CPR/AED class and they wouldn't even teach
tourniquet and said not to use it.
I guess though, on a battlefield that it would free up your hands so you could return fire.
 
Heavy bleeding from the leg = strong indication for arterial bleed. A short-term "tourniquet" will not endanger the limb, especially a leg, especially from a puncture wound (using the term loosely). However, unmitigated bleeding from a major artery (your legs have big ones), will result in imminent death.

It's also not easy to use the pressure point for the leg - lots of tissue, big hose...plus, he'd prolly get slapped!

No good deed goes unpunished, indeed! Hope it works out for him.
 
Fox News just interviewed the guy and he said he was fired for 2 reasons. The primary reason is that the management company didn't want him to respond to the shooting at all. They wanted him to call them and that's all. He saved her life by running to her aid and was fired for it. Having the shotgun was a secondary reason for firing.
 
http://www.cs.amedd.army.mil/courses/cats/cats2a/HumanTourniquet_USAISR.pdf

I was issued my CATS in 2005. Thank God I didn't have to use it, but the medics
in our area preferred the ones with the plastic turn handle over the aluminum
one.

I had a similar apartment experience back in the 90s, but the lady had been
hit in the head with a blunt object and ended up with around 60 stitches. A
lot of blood, but she was lucky in the sense that there were no fractures,
loss of sight or hearing. Perp had entered through a ground floor window to
her apartment and she was able to make it out to the interior stairwell where
we (wife and I) and one other neighbor (female) heard her screaming and came
to her aid......will spare the long story from here --no shootout with a BG and
I didn't lose my job.

The thing I recall most was that NO other people in the apartment would leave
their rooms until after LEOs/EMTs were in the building --and trust me the lady's
screams were a lot louder than they were. Nobody else wanted to get involved
and this included apartments with 2-3 guys each living in them. People just
kind of cracked their doors and peeked out to see what was happening.

This is why it's good to have a firearm when it's likely just to be YOU. However,
please note here that first aid skills were used. You are also more likely
to run into a car accident over a car-jacking. Both happened in that area
where I lived at the time, but I only saw accidents.
 
:banghead:

:cuss:

Stories like this get my Irish up like few others. A guy does the right thing, and due to the forced cowardness of the Insurance companies and liability concerns, he gets fired.

No wonder why we are turning into a nation of passive zombies.
 
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