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Day after saving woman, transit hero helps save fire victims
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Less than 24 hours after saving a woman who fell in front
of a Washington subway train, a Houston, Texas, transit cop was at it again. Moments
after leaving an interview Wednesday about his heroics at the train station, Houston
Metro Officer Eliot Swainson helped victims escape an early morning fire at a
Washington row house.
Swainson, who was deputized to help with crowds at President Obama's inauguration,
and two Washington transit officers noticed smoke pouring from the row house in
northwest Washington. "I just turned to the transit guy and said, 'It's your turn to be a
hero,' " Swainson told CNN affiliate KIAH-TV in Houston.
Swainson and the two others were the first on the scene. One of them called firefighters
and all three began alerting residents of the building. "We just pounded on doors and stuff,"
he said. "We couldn't get into the unit that was actually burned -- there was just too much
smoke coming out of there."
When firefighters arrived, they rescued a 14-year-old boy from the burning unit. A woman
in that unit was killed, authorities said. An elderly man, one of those who escaped before
firefighters arrived, was treated for smoke inhalation, but his injuries weren't life-threatening,
local media reported.
A day earlier, a 68-year-old woman from Nashville, Tennessee, fell off a platform and onto
the tracks at a Washington station. Swainson first tried to pull her out. Then, as an approaching
train roared down the tunnel toward them, he tucked her into a three-foot space under the
platform, where she escaped with only minor injuries.
Don't Miss
* Transit cop saves woman on Inauguration Day
His actions won accolades from Washington's top metro officer, Chief Michael Taborn,
who said Swainson did exactly what he was supposed to do and that he was "enormously
grateful for his actions."
Washington's metro system said transit officers like Swainson from 18 locations around
the country were in town to assist with the inauguration. Ridership records were shattered
Tuesday -- there were more than 1.5 million trips across all the authority's platforms,
including more than 1.1 million on the subway system.
The Nashville woman's was the only accident reported along transit lines, a spokeswoman
said. She was treated and released from a hospital on Tuesday.
On Thursday, Swainson, a former Houston police officer, was slow to accept the label of
hero. "It's an interesting situation," he said of all the hubbub over his actions. "But it's what
we're trained to do." But he couldn't resist playing along when a reporter asked whether --
like Superman -- he was wearing a shirt with a giant letter "S" beneath his uniform.
"Well, it's 'Swainson,' " he said, laughing. "So, it's always there."
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Less than 24 hours after saving a woman who fell in front
of a Washington subway train, a Houston, Texas, transit cop was at it again. Moments
after leaving an interview Wednesday about his heroics at the train station, Houston
Metro Officer Eliot Swainson helped victims escape an early morning fire at a
Washington row house.
Swainson, who was deputized to help with crowds at President Obama's inauguration,
and two Washington transit officers noticed smoke pouring from the row house in
northwest Washington. "I just turned to the transit guy and said, 'It's your turn to be a
hero,' " Swainson told CNN affiliate KIAH-TV in Houston.
Swainson and the two others were the first on the scene. One of them called firefighters
and all three began alerting residents of the building. "We just pounded on doors and stuff,"
he said. "We couldn't get into the unit that was actually burned -- there was just too much
smoke coming out of there."
When firefighters arrived, they rescued a 14-year-old boy from the burning unit. A woman
in that unit was killed, authorities said. An elderly man, one of those who escaped before
firefighters arrived, was treated for smoke inhalation, but his injuries weren't life-threatening,
local media reported.
A day earlier, a 68-year-old woman from Nashville, Tennessee, fell off a platform and onto
the tracks at a Washington station. Swainson first tried to pull her out. Then, as an approaching
train roared down the tunnel toward them, he tucked her into a three-foot space under the
platform, where she escaped with only minor injuries.
Don't Miss
* Transit cop saves woman on Inauguration Day
His actions won accolades from Washington's top metro officer, Chief Michael Taborn,
who said Swainson did exactly what he was supposed to do and that he was "enormously
grateful for his actions."
Washington's metro system said transit officers like Swainson from 18 locations around
the country were in town to assist with the inauguration. Ridership records were shattered
Tuesday -- there were more than 1.5 million trips across all the authority's platforms,
including more than 1.1 million on the subway system.
The Nashville woman's was the only accident reported along transit lines, a spokeswoman
said. She was treated and released from a hospital on Tuesday.
On Thursday, Swainson, a former Houston police officer, was slow to accept the label of
hero. "It's an interesting situation," he said of all the hubbub over his actions. "But it's what
we're trained to do." But he couldn't resist playing along when a reporter asked whether --
like Superman -- he was wearing a shirt with a giant letter "S" beneath his uniform.
"Well, it's 'Swainson,' " he said, laughing. "So, it's always there."