This photo from body camera video carried by Lodi, Calif., Police Officer Erika Urrea as she pulls a man from the path of a passing train on Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2020. The man in a wheelchair was stuck on railroad tracks seconds before the train came past, in a dramatic rescue caught on the officer's body camera. The Lodi Police Department says Urrea was patrolling Wednesday near the tracks when she saw the man and the railroad crossing arms starting to come down. Unable to move the wheelchair, Urrea is seen dragging the man from it seconds before the train barrels through, striking the wheelchair and the man's leg. The 66-year-old man is at a hospital in stable condition. ( Lodi Police Department via AP)
This photo from body camera video carried by Lodi, Calif., Police Officer Erika Urrea as she pulls a man from the path of a passing train on Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2020. The man in a wheelchair was stuck on railroad tracks seconds before the train came past, in a dramatic rescue caught on the officer’s body camera. The Lodi Police Department says Urrea was patrolling Wednesday near the tracks when she saw the man and the railroad crossing arms starting to come down. Unable to move the wheelchair, Urrea is seen dragging the man from it seconds before the train barrels through, striking the wheelchair and the man’s leg. The 66-year-old man is at a hospital in stable condition. ( Lodi Police Department via AP)

 

LODI, Calif. (AP) — A police officer in California pulled a man from a wheelchair that was stuck on railroad tracks seconds before the train came past, in a dramatic rescue caught on the officer’s body camera.

Officer Erika Urrea of the Lodi Police Department was patrolling Wednesday near the tracks when she saw the man and the railroad crossing arms starting to come down, the police department said in a statement.

The video shows Urrea rushes from her patrol car and tries to push the man and the wheelchair out of the way as the oncoming locomotive sounds its horn. Unable to move the wheelchair, Urrea is seen dragging the man from it seconds before the train barrels through, striking the wheelchair and the man’s leg, the department said.

“Officer Urrea risked her own life to save another and her actions prevented a tragedy,” the statement said.

The 66-year-old man was taken to a hospital to be treated for a leg injury and remained hospitalized Thursday in stable condition, said Lodi Police Department spokesman Sgt. Ricardo Garcia.

As reported by Vos Iz Neias