Kerstii Groce: I Had Seizures, I Wasn’t Driving Ambulance Drunk

Kerstii Groce - AMR Employee

Mississippi EMT Kerstii Groce – who was charged with DUI last month after video showed her ambulance being driven erratically – has pleaded not guilty, saying she was not intoxicated but having seizures at the time of the incident.

Kerstii Groce

American Medical Response (AMR) EMT Kerstii Groce told local media that she had only ever had one other seizure before August 22, when she was pulled over in her ambulance and arrested after another motorist recorded the rig drifting on and off the road.

The other motorist said in August that he saw another EMT and a patient in the ambulance with Groce, and that she had told him the crew was performing a non-emergency transport. AMR did not confirm any details about the incident but released a statement saying Groce had been placed on unpaid leave.

American Medical Response (AMR) has had several incidents of late with their vehicles including an accident in neighboring Georgia, Monday, September 22, 2020.

Kerstii Groce Legal Defense

Attorney Michael Crosby, who is representing Groce, says Moss Point police never performed a sobriety test or had her blow into an Intoxilyzer 8000, the device Moss Point police use to test blood alcohol content, before arresting his client for DUI. He also said Groce’s blood was never drawn for testing.

Crosby added that Groce’s neurologist has stated that she likely had seizures or another similar medical episode.

Groce’s remains on unpaid administrative leave while her case is pending. WLOX said it did not receive a response when reaching out for comment from Moss Point Police Chief Brandon Ashley.

 

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Mexico Sends Wildland Firefighters Across Border

Mexico Wildland Firefighters Assist US Efforts

Mexico wildland firefighters are among more than a hundred responders being sent from Mexico to the United States to help battle wildfires in California per diplomatic posts by the Consul General of Mexico in Dallas.

Mexico’s Environment Department said Wednesday that five teams of twenty highly qualified, equipped firefighters from Mexico’s national forestry commission will work with the U.S. Forest Service.

Mexico Wildland Firefighters Mexico Wildland Firefighters

The group landed Wednesday afternoon at San Bernardino International Airport per local news.

Firefighters from Mexico will first be sent to work in California’s Sequoia National Park. The park is threatened by the SQF Complex of fires ignited by lightning in the Sequoia National Forest.

Mexico Wildland Firefighters

The department said Mexico can spare the crews because in 31 of Mexico’s 32 states there are no active wildfires.

The summer and early fall are rainy season in most of Mexico.

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American Medical Response Ambulance Accident

American Medical Response DeKalb

An American Medical Response (AMR) Ambulance from DeKalb, Georgia was involved in an accident Monday night per local authorities.

Authorities confirm three people are recovering after the motor vehicle collision involving an ambulance in DeKalb County temporarily trapped them.

The accident happened on Monday evening in the area of Moreland Avenue and Bailey Street. A DeKalb Fire spokesperson said that the accident involved an American Medical Response (AMR) ambulance.

American Medical Response DeKalb

Authorities said they were able to remove all three accident victims from the wreckage including two AMR personnel and one other person who was not an employee.

The personnel had what DeKalb Fire Rescue described as minor injuries and the other person in the ambulance was said to have moderate injuries.

Authorities haven’t detailed exactly what caused the accident or whether the non-employee in the ambulance was a patient being transported.

American Medical Response

It is unclear if the ambulance was responding to an incident or not. For years, DeKalb County leadership has been stung by complaints the ambulance contractor, American Medical Response, isn’t living up to the contract for quick responses.

Dunwoody, Brookhaven Doraville, Chamblee; all towns in north DeKalb were especially concerned about slow ambulance times.

Ambulance Accidents

Last week there was another ambulance accident involving a FDNY EMS unit and FDNY Ladder 102 killing the ambulance patient. Additionally two off duty EMS responders were killed early Monday morning in a separate New York motor vehicle incident.

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William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps Loses Two

William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps

Two New York EMS providers with William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps were killed in an off-duty vehicle crash Monday.

Police officials said William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps 1st Lt. Moshe Herzog, 27, was driving his vehicle along with EMT David Schneebalg, 26, as a passenger. Their vehicle collided with a tractor-trailer while attempting to change lanes, according to local news.

Both vehicles went into a ditch and caught fire after the crash. Herzog and Schneebalg were pronounced dead at the scene, authorities said.

Herzog and Schneebalg were both members of William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps and Haverstraw Ambulance Corps. They had been celebrating Rosh Hashanah together in another area and were returning home at the time of the crash.

“They were dedicated members of the EMS community and served with honor and dignity,” the William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps wrote in a statement.

Haverstraw Ambulance Corps officials wrote, “they both served EMS with pride!”

William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps Facebook Statement

The driver of the tractor-trailer, Luis Velazquez, 59, also became trapped and was extricated. He was transported to the hospital with unspecified injuries.

This is the second fatal accident involving New York first responders in less than a week. A patient was killed late last week when the ambulance he was being transported in was struck by a truck company responding to another emergency.

‘Help me get out of here’

Herzog was also a member of the volunteer rescue squad Chaverim of Rockland. Josef Margaretten, a coordinator for the Chaverim response group — a volunteer security and rescue squad serving the Orthodox community — rushed to the scene, knowing his friend had been in an accident.

Per one news source Margatten said “One of our members, who is also with Faist, heard him screaming on the radio for help. And the minute he heard, he notified us and we went down to the scene.”

Herzog was reportedly asking ‘help me get out of here.’

He was on the local radio channel: “Please. I can’t come out. Anyone to help me get out of here,” Margaretten said. “He was asking for help, even on the local EMS channel, he was begging for help, but the car was in flames. There wasn’t too much we could have done.”

William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps

In 1975, Bill and Erna Faist saw the need to improve the ambulance response time in the area known as South Spring Valley. They felt with the growth of the town it was time for our area to have its own volunteer ambulance service. They named the department William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps in memory of their son whom they had lost to an automobile accident  They formed a group of 6 community minded residents who started the process of obtaining a certification from New York State to run an ambulance, seting up boundaries, and recruiting members.

As they first started, the department did not have a home, so they held their meetings in such places as people’s homes, in local schools, at the local power company’s building, and in theHugh Gassner Firehouse.  Then they started sending out notices to the community concerning the needs for manpower and funds.  As the membership started to grow training as EMT’s began, and the neighboring corps allowed our members to ride on their ambulances to get their feet wet. The first ambulance was bought used from Nanuet Volunteer Ambulance Corps, and was kept in the driveway of Bill and Erna Faist’s home on Chestnut Ridge Road.

By the beginning of 1977 they were well on their way but there was still work to be done. They were still working out their dispatch systems, communications with local police and hospitals. On July 1, 1977, after almost three years of very hard work, their dream finally came true: The William P. Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps went into service for the first time.

William Paul Faist Volunteer Ambulance Corps

Early in 1977, the Town of Ramapo had turned over a small piece of property to the corps for the purpose of building a headquarters. On June 12, a groundbreaking ceremony took place, but it would be more then two years before we could call it home.  Bill Faist oversaw the project of building our headquarters. While materials and specialized labor were either donated or provided at minimal cost, the membership, in addition to being EMT’s, had to become carpenters, masons, and electricians in order to get the headquarters built. By winter of 1979, the building was not yet complete, but there was enough progress that they could occupy the still-unfinshed building.

Over the years, the William P. Faist Ambulance Corps has continued to grow as has the community it services.  We occupied that small building that we moved into in 1979 until February 2018 when we moved into our new facuilty on the joining property and we continue to need more volunteers to keep serving our community.

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Citibank Turns Back On 9-11 Responder

Citibank denied a 9-11 responder’s use of his credit card for cancer treatment medications early Monday morning despite the credit card holder having both available balance and a zero balance on his Citibank Double Cash Card. The charges were flagged as fraud despite the pre-warning the charge would be coming.

Citi was contacted prior to the provider attempting to use his credit card and notated the account, but moments later when he tried to use his charge card it was denied.

Citibank

Citi Executive Customer Care says they will respond in fifteen days, but requests through social media and customer service have gone unanswered.

Citibank

Citibank which was hit hard by the attacks of 9-11 seems to have forogtten the same providers that ran to their rescue just over nineteen years ago.

Citigroup ‘s operations were obliterated during September 11 when the building imploded. The firm occupied 39 floors in the World Trade Center 7 building. The 47-story building, also known as the Salomon Brothers Building, crumbled after being weakened by an attack on the Twin Towers, just a few hundred yards away.

Other major tenants in the Salomon Brothers Building were the Securities & Exchange Commission, the Standard Chartered Bank, ITT Hartford Insurance Group, the Internal Revenue Service, and the U.S. Secret Service.

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FDNY Ladder 102, Ambulance Collide Killing 1, Injuring 11

FDNY Ladder 102

FDNY Ladder 102 and an ambulance collided early Thursday morning killing one patient in the ambulance and injuring eleven, including eight members of FDNY.

Ladder 102 ‘T-boned’ the ambulance carrying a heart attack patient at an intersection at about 12:45 a.m. per local news. The patient was pronounced dead and his sister, who was in the ambulance with him, was seriously injured.

The collision caused the ambulance to strike a third vehicle; two people in that vehicle were transported and are in stable condition. Six firefighters and two EMTs were also injured; one EMT sustained a leg injury and another complained of pain. The firefighters’ exact injuries were not reported but were said to not be serious.

Family members said the man who died in the crash was Jamil Almansouri, 59, a local bodega owner, known to his friends as Mike.

Both FDNY vehicles had their lights activated when the crash occurred. Officials said the ladder truck was responding to a fire on the fifth floor of an eight-story building.

The FDNY EMS Union President recently complained about lives being at risk secondary to forecast budget cuts.

FDNY Ladder 102

Ladder Company 102 started out as Ladder 2 in the Brooklyn Fire Department on September 15, 1869. It became part of the Fire Department of the City of New York and was redesignated as Ladder 102 on January 1, 1913.

 

Star Spangled Banner in London

The Star Spangled Banner was played during the changing of the guard today, nineteen years ago, in honor of the United States which had been attacked the day prior.

The day after the September 11 attacks more than 5000 American tourists and expats gathered at the gates of Buckingham Palace. At the request of Queen Elizabeth II, the band of the Coldstream Guards broke with hundreds of years of tradition to play The Star Spangled Banner during the changing of the guard.

Star Spangled Banner

The decision to play the Star Spangled Banner showed the Queen’s intent to Never Forget 9-11.

Star Spangled Banner by Francis Scott Key

The Star-Spangled Banner” is the national anthem of the United States. The lyrics come from the “Defence of Fort M’Henry“, a poem written on September 14, 1814, by 35-year-old lawyer and amateur poet Francis Scott Key. He wrote the piece after witnessing the bombardment of Fort McHenry by British ships of the Royal Navy in Baltimore Harbor during the Battle of Baltimore in the War of 1812. Key was inspired by the large U.S. flag, with 15 stars and 15 stripes, known as the Star-Spangled Banner, flying triumphantly above the fort during the U.S. victory.

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Vice President Pence Takes Part in 9-11 Memorial

Vice President Pence will be taking part in Friday’s anniversary memorial of the 9-11 attacks. The Tunnel to Towers Foundation put out a statement noting they were honored the Vice President of the United States Mike Pence and Second Lady of the United States Karen Pence will take part in the Foundation’s memorial ceremony on Friday, September 11, marking the 19th anniversary of the attacks on our nation.

Vice President Pence

Tunnel to Towers took the unprecedented step to host an independent memorial ceremony  after the National September 11 Memorial & Museum announced the traditional reading of the names by victim’s family members would not happen at their ceremony this year, citing COVID-19 concerns.

The horrific loss of life, from the largest attack on US soil, a terrorist attack, requires that we read these names out loud, in person, on this day, every year. We can never minimize that fateful day,“said Frank Siller, Chairman and CEO of Tunnel to Towers, who lost his brother FDNY Firefighter Stephen Siller in the attack.

The Tunnel to Towers Foundation is honored that Vice President Pence will be in attendance at its Reading of the Names ceremony on 9/11. His presence signals the immense gravity of the day and so appropriately honors the fallen, who gave their lives for us 19 years ago. We are grateful to Vice President Pence for helping America to NEVER FORGET.

Vice President Pence

Michael R. Pence was born in Columbus, Indiana, on June 7, 1959, one of six children born to Edward and Nancy Pence. As a young boy he had a front row seat to the American Dream. After his grandfather immigrated to the United States when he was 17, his family settled in the Midwest. The future Vice President watched his Mom and Dad build everything that matters – a family, a business, and a good name. Sitting at the feet of his mother and his father, who started a successful convenience store business in their small Indiana town, he was raised to believe in the importance of hard work, faith, and family.

Vice President Pence set off for Hanover College, earning his bachelor’s degree in history in 1981. While there, he renewed his Christian faith which remains the driving force in his life. He later attended Indiana University School of Law and met the love of his life, Second Lady Karen Pence.

After graduating, Vice President Pence practiced law, led the Indiana Policy Review Foundation, and began hosting The Mike Pence Show, a syndicated talk radio show and a weekly television public affairs program in Indiana. Along the way he became the proud father to three children, Michael, Charlotte, and Audrey.

Lincoln County EMS Accident

Lincoln County EMS was involved in a head-on collision between a quick response vehicle (QRV) and another vehicle Thursday morning injured a North Carolina paramedic. It was just four days ago that another North Carolina service, the Mecklenburg Emergency Medical Services Agency, was involved in an accident.

Lincoln County EMS

Lincoln County EMS (LCEMS) released a statement saying one paramedic was on board the Quick Response Vehicle (QRV) and en route to their base when the QRV was struck head-on by another vehicle at approximately 7:40 a.m. Lincoln County EMS and the East Lincoln Fire Department responded to the crash. The North Carolina State Highway Patrol is investigating.

The paramedic was extricated from the QRV and transported “emergency traffic” to the hospital, according to the agency. The other driver was evaluated at the scene and not transported. No additional information is available on the paramedic’s condition at this time. The paramedic on board was en route to his base station at the time and per the statement does not appear to be responding to a call.

About Lincoln County EMS

Lincoln County is the primary provider of emergency and non-emergency 911 Advanced Life Support transport and paramedic level service for Lincoln County, North Carolina, including the incorporated City of Lincolnton. LCEMS is responsible for the planning, coordination, direction and evaluation of all pre-hospital patient care related services provided within Lincoln County, North Carolina. These services include, but are not limited to, Paramedic level treatment and transportation of the citizens and visitors of Lincoln County that require the interdiction of a modern EMS system and the medical first responder programs that involve patient care, public safety/injury prevention, Mass Gatherings, pre-hospital medical education and disaster preparedness and response as it relates to patient care.
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LODD: Texas Firefighter Diana Jones

Texas firefighter-EMT Diana Jones was killed battling a wildfire in northern California on Monday.  Jones died while battling the August Complex at Mendocino National Forest. She was a member of Cresson Volunteer Fire Department where she had served for nearly five years.

Cresson Fire Chief Ron Becker told FOX4, “She was a good firefighter. She was a good EMT and she was just a good person.” Jones’ son was also a member of the Cresson department and both responded to wildfires each summer through a company that contracts with the federal government.

Diana Jones - Member of Cresson Volunteer Fire Department

The U.S. Forest Service confirmed that one firefighter was killed and another was injured battling the August Complex at Mendocino National Forest on Monday.

“Our department is numbed by the news and we are hurting,” the Cresson Volunteer Fire Department wrote in a Facebook post Monday.

The August Complex has burned nearly 243,000 acres and consists of 37 different fires, some of which have merged, that started on Aug. 17, according to U.S. Forest Service officials. About 690 personnel are battling the fire, which was 20% contained as of Tuesday morning.

Diana Jones

Jones and her son, Cresson VFD Capt. Ian Shelly, travel west and work for private contractors fighting fires during the fire season.

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