Video shows off-duty NYPD officer saving choking 1-year-old


WCBS

By Dave Carlin

Click here for updates on this story

    NEW YORK (WCBS, WLNY) — An off-duty NYPD helped a frantic mother whose infant was choking.

If not for his brave actions, the baby girl might not be alive.

“I went out and saw the mom with the baby lifeless in her arms” Video from a home surveillance camera shows NYPD Officer Freddy Cerpa saving the life of the unresponsive 1-year-old girl. He checked her airway and then patted her on the back until she was breathing again. It happened on Dec. 7 at around 2 p.m.

Friday at NYPD headquarters, he spoke about his heroic actions, which he called just part of his job.

“I was home getting ready to go to work,” Cerpa said. “I hear banging on my door … ‘Please help my baby.’ I went out and saw the mom with the baby lifeless in her arms.”

The taps to the baby’s back he learned during police academy training about a year ago.

“I felt her chest go up and down, meaning that she’s starting to breathe again,” Cerpa said. “It’s an amazing feeling to know I was able to help save a baby’s life before Christmas.”

The parents knew they could get help by running to his front door because they are longtime family friends. The couple asked not to be identified.

“They gave me their gratitude about helping them and just let me know the baby’s fully recovered,” Cerpa said.

That very same week there was a similar save. On Dec. 10, NYPD Det. Michael Greaney saved a choking 8-month-old girl. That impressive rescue witnessed by many driving by along the Bronx River Parkway.

“Our mission is to preserve life, and I feel that’s the most Important part of being a police officer,” Cerpa said.

He said he will remember forever the rush of relief he felt.

Cerpa is assigned to the 43rd Precinct stationhouse in the Bronx. There’s one thing he wants every member of the public to know.

“If you have any precautions you want to take, like taking a CPR class there are resources you can find online,” Cerpa said.

That’s advice from an officer who knows when he’s off duty, he’s always on call.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Storm spotter remembers warning of a deadly tornado that hit North Texas towns 10 years ago


KTVT

By Bo Evans

Click here for updates on this story

    TEXAS (KTVT) — 10 years ago today, an EF-4 tornado touched down and ripped through Sunnyvale, Garland, and Rowlett, leaving more than a dozen dead.

But things could have been worse; a storm spotter watched the tornado form and alerted the National Weather Service and emergency responders immediately, no doubt saving countless lives.

“Just hate to think that people lost their lives and there was nothing we could do,” said Laszlo Laky.

10 years later, Laky still lives with the fact that 13 people were killed when an EF-4 tornado touched down in Sunnyvale.

He saw the events of that day from the beginning.

“We were warning them, and they were setting off the sirens based on what we were seeing when it first formed, so we couldn’t have done it any earlier. We saw it before it actually touched the ground,” said Laky.

The trained storm spotter called 911 as the tornado was forming

“It’s fixin’ to cross I-30. It’s fixin’ to cross I-30. We need to shut traffic down on I-30,” Laky can be heard on the 911 calls. “It’s getting bigger. God it’s huge.”

There’s no doubt Laky saved lives that night, but the memories of the ones he couldn’t save stay with him.

“Man, this is 10 years later, and I can still see that lowering and I can still see that closet, I can still see the gas station,” he said. “The closet was exposed, and there was a dress hanging that was undisturbed. How does that happen?”

But he knows that his actions that night mattered.

“That’s why we do it. The idea of spotting is to give early warning to people, give them a chance to seek cover,” said Laky.

Laky did exactly that. He gave people a chance.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Storm spotter remembers warning of a deadly tornado that hit North Texas towns 10 years ago

By Bo Evans

Click here for updates on this story

    TEXAS (KTVT) — 10 years ago today, an EF-4 tornado touched down and ripped through Sunnyvale, Garland, and Rowlett, leaving more than a dozen dead.

But things could have been worse; a storm spotter watched the tornado form and alerted the National Weather Service and emergency responders immediately, no doubt saving countless lives.

“Just hate to think that people lost their lives and there was nothing we could do,” said Laszlo Laky.

10 years later, Laky still lives with the fact that 13 people were killed when an EF-4 tornado touched down in Sunnyvale.

He saw the events of that day from the beginning.

“We were warning them, and they were setting off the sirens based on what we were seeing when it first formed, so we couldn’t have done it any earlier. We saw it before it actually touched the ground,” said Laky.

The trained storm spotter called 911 as the tornado was forming

“It’s fixin’ to cross I-30. It’s fixin’ to cross I-30. We need to shut traffic down on I-30,” Laky can be heard on the 911 calls. “It’s getting bigger. God it’s huge.”

There’s no doubt Laky saved lives that night, but the memories of the ones he couldn’t save stay with him.

“Man, this is 10 years later, and I can still see that lowering and I can still see that closet, I can still see the gas station,” he said. “The closet was exposed, and there was a dress hanging that was undisturbed. How does that happen?”

But he knows that his actions that night mattered.

“That’s why we do it. The idea of spotting is to give early warning to people, give them a chance to seek cover,” said Laky.

Laky did exactly that. He gave people a chance.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Firefighters and their families celebrate Christmas together at Fort Worth fire station


KTVT

By Marissa Armas

Click here for updates on this story

    TEXAS (KTVT) — While many families get to be at home on Christmas Day, many first responders must work during the holiday. For them, Christmas Day looks a little different.

“We played basketball, wiffleball, scooter riding. She brought a scooter that was a hit,” said Jessie Lilly and Chelsea McConnell, two fire wives who were visiting the station with their kids.

Thursday, Lilly and McConnell celebrated Christmas, not at home, but inside Fort Worth Fire Station 14.

“The fireman had prepared some food for us, and then we brought some sides and so we all had lunch together too,” said Lilly.

Holiday or not, first responders are on the clock, no matter the day.

“This was actually our first year to experience it,” said McConnell. “It’s been really cool to get together, get to know everyone, you know, kind of bond and spend time with each other.”

Lieutenant Brant Frazier said, while it can be tough, this is the job they signed up for.

“The majority of us are used to working on the holidays,” said Frazier. “I think being in the emergency services, look at doctors, nurses, police officers, anybody who’s in a civil servant type of position, those are all selfless service positions. So, you know, we’re here to serve others before ourselves.”

And that selfless service was put into action on Thursday, when the crew was called out to assist with a small fire nearby. Frazier said making the day feel as close to home as possible helps keep morale strong.

“Christmas day, it’s no different. We still run all the same call types. People still get sick, accidents still happen,” he said. “To be able to see mom or dad, to see them at work and actually see what they’re doing and still have that family lifestyle, I think is as good as it is for the kids and the wives, I think it’s equally as important for the guys to keep their morale up as well.”

For many of these firefighters, this job is a calling, and while Christmas may look different for their families, it’s these small moments they are grateful for.

Lilly and McConnell said they want to make Christmas bigger and better next year, hopefully adding a Christmas tree to Station 14.

“You just kind of learn and adapt and keep moving,” McConnell said.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Firefighters and their families celebrate Christmas together at Fort Worth fire station

By Marissa Armas

Click here for updates on this story

    TEXAS (KTVT) — While many families get to be at home on Christmas Day, many first responders must work during the holiday. For them, Christmas Day looks a little different.

“We played basketball, wiffleball, scooter riding. She brought a scooter that was a hit,” said Jessie Lilly and Chelsea McConnell, two fire wives who were visiting the station with their kids.

Thursday, Lilly and McConnell celebrated Christmas, not at home, but inside Fort Worth Fire Station 14.

“The fireman had prepared some food for us, and then we brought some sides and so we all had lunch together too,” said Lilly.

Holiday or not, first responders are on the clock, no matter the day.

“This was actually our first year to experience it,” said McConnell. “It’s been really cool to get together, get to know everyone, you know, kind of bond and spend time with each other.”

Lieutenant Brant Frazier said, while it can be tough, this is the job they signed up for.

“The majority of us are used to working on the holidays,” said Frazier. “I think being in the emergency services, look at doctors, nurses, police officers, anybody who’s in a civil servant type of position, those are all selfless service positions. So, you know, we’re here to serve others before ourselves.”

And that selfless service was put into action on Thursday, when the crew was called out to assist with a small fire nearby. Frazier said making the day feel as close to home as possible helps keep morale strong.

“Christmas day, it’s no different. We still run all the same call types. People still get sick, accidents still happen,” he said. “To be able to see mom or dad, to see them at work and actually see what they’re doing and still have that family lifestyle, I think is as good as it is for the kids and the wives, I think it’s equally as important for the guys to keep their morale up as well.”

For many of these firefighters, this job is a calling, and while Christmas may look different for their families, it’s these small moments they are grateful for.

Lilly and McConnell said they want to make Christmas bigger and better next year, hopefully adding a Christmas tree to Station 14.

“You just kind of learn and adapt and keep moving,” McConnell said.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

As “Hockey Mom of the Year” battles cancer, sports community helps hold the line


WCCO

By Heather Brown

Click here for updates on this story

    MINNESOTA (WCCO) — Starting Friday, some of the world’s best hockey players will face off in the Twin Cities at Grand Casino Arena and Mariucci Arena for the next week and half.

Minnesota is hosting the 50th IIHF World Junior Hockey Championship, where the best men’s players under the age of 20 will compete for the gold.

In honor of the competition, the organizers of the event thought it also important to honor the people behind the players — the moms who helped make it all happened.

In November, five “Hockey Mom of the Year” finalists were chosen and one was crowned at a ceremony at Mall of America. She is Jacqueline Nowakowski of Lino Lakes, mom to 5-year-old Jake, 8-year-old Owen and 11-year Centennial peewee Leo.

“I’m happy to represent all hockey moms,” said Jacqueline Nowakowski at the time. “We’re all doing it together, we’re all one big community.”

Hockey moms are a community, one that Jacqueline Nowakowski had no idea she’d need as much as she does. In June, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

“It was last week of school, and it was, ‘This is cancer.’ And at the time it was really scary,” she said.

She underwent 12 weeks of chemotherapy and had a mastectomy in October. Right away, there were meal trains, gift cards, carpool offers, pink shirts for Leo Nowakowski’s team and pink hockey tape for their sticks.

Even hockey moms who coached opposing teams chipped in.

“You think about the family, their kids, just how their lives are going to change, and whatever you can do to help,” said Spring Lake Park coach Jess Scott.

The Nowakowski family was and continues to be grateful for all that support. But for Jacqueline Nowakowski herself, it was the quiet words of support to her eldest son that mattered to her most.

“His peers would ask him, ‘How are you? How are things? How is your mom?'” she said. “Just for people to ask that, you know, it meant a lot.”

She said hockey brought her family a sense of normalcy in abnormal times.

“He’ll look back and, he’s old enough to understand what happened this summer, what we’ve been through as a family,” she said. “But he’ll also remember the good times. I’m thankful for that.”

Jacqueline Nowakowski will have to undergo more treatment in the New Year, but doctors say her prognosis looks good. She and her family are excited about attending as many World Junior hockey games as they can.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

As “Hockey Mom of the Year” battles cancer, sports community helps hold the line

By Heather Brown

Click here for updates on this story

    MINNESOTA (WCCO) — Starting Friday, some of the world’s best hockey players will face off in the Twin Cities at Grand Casino Arena and Mariucci Arena for the next week and half.

Minnesota is hosting the 50th IIHF World Junior Hockey Championship, where the best men’s players under the age of 20 will compete for the gold.

In honor of the competition, the organizers of the event thought it also important to honor the people behind the players — the moms who helped make it all happened.

In November, five “Hockey Mom of the Year” finalists were chosen and one was crowned at a ceremony at Mall of America. She is Jacqueline Nowakowski of Lino Lakes, mom to 5-year-old Jake, 8-year-old Owen and 11-year Centennial peewee Leo.

“I’m happy to represent all hockey moms,” said Jacqueline Nowakowski at the time. “We’re all doing it together, we’re all one big community.”

Hockey moms are a community, one that Jacqueline Nowakowski had no idea she’d need as much as she does. In June, she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

“It was last week of school, and it was, ‘This is cancer.’ And at the time it was really scary,” she said.

She underwent 12 weeks of chemotherapy and had a mastectomy in October. Right away, there were meal trains, gift cards, carpool offers, pink shirts for Leo Nowakowski’s team and pink hockey tape for their sticks.

Even hockey moms who coached opposing teams chipped in.

“You think about the family, their kids, just how their lives are going to change, and whatever you can do to help,” said Spring Lake Park coach Jess Scott.

The Nowakowski family was and continues to be grateful for all that support. But for Jacqueline Nowakowski herself, it was the quiet words of support to her eldest son that mattered to her most.

“His peers would ask him, ‘How are you? How are things? How is your mom?'” she said. “Just for people to ask that, you know, it meant a lot.”

She said hockey brought her family a sense of normalcy in abnormal times.

“He’ll look back and, he’s old enough to understand what happened this summer, what we’ve been through as a family,” she said. “But he’ll also remember the good times. I’m thankful for that.”

Jacqueline Nowakowski will have to undergo more treatment in the New Year, but doctors say her prognosis looks good. She and her family are excited about attending as many World Junior hockey games as they can.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

SoCal mother and 2-year-old daughter who were living in car surprised with fully furnished apartment

By KABC Staff

Click here for updates on this story

    LOS ANGELES (KABC) — The holidays are now a lot brighter for a Southern California mother and daughter.

Kioka Hampton and her daughter Paris had been living in their car after the death of Kioka’s grandmother.

But thanks to the Holliday’s Helping Hands nonprofit, Hampton and her daughter secured housing and support services.

The nonprofit gave the family their own fully furnished apartment complete with a Christmas tree and presents.

“She thinks that she’s walking into an empty apartment, just to check and see if they painted a couple of things, and so when she walks in … she’s going to be totally surprised,” said Holliday’s Helping Hands Founder Katina Holliday before the big reveal. “She’s going to walk in to a refrigerator full of food, a stove because she was waiting on somebody to donate a stove to her. We were able to purchase that as well, and a little Christmas cheer.”

“Paris, the baby, is deserving of it all, and so is the mom,” she added.

The mother is also enrolled in the nonprofit’s Certified Nursing Assistant program.

Once she completes her state exam, Hampton plans to start working in healthcare to build a brighter future for her family.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Shelter dog reunited with former family, four years after he went missing


WWJ

By Paula Wethington

Click here for updates on this story

    DETROIT (WWJ) — A dog that had been living for over a year in a shelter with Friends of Michigan Animals Rescue was reunited with his former family.

After 387 days in the Belleville animal rescue shelter, the dog called Ziggy had become the shelter’s longest resident, according to the details related on the rescue agency’s social media accounts.

The staff knew that the dog was surrendered into shelter care when his owner had to enter long-term memory care. But the canine’s story began long before that – it turns out that he was lost from a Dearborn Heights family about four years ago. And that’s who eventually came to claim him.

“Over a year passed, and we couldn’t understand how such a gentle, affectionate dog was still here,” the staff said.

“Shelter life wore him down. He barely lifted his head when people walked in. We tried everything to help him feel safe … but he was waiting for something he couldn’t name.”

A photo of the dog looking at Christmas tree ornaments that was circulating on Facebook as part of a shelter promotion to find new homes for their animals got in front of the right people. A message was sent to the shelter with the author saying Ziggy might actually be her dog Toby, who ran away four years ago.

The shelter looked over photos she submitted of the dog as a puppy, showing the markings on his face and body.

“She came to meet him,” the shelter staff said. “Ziggy, who almost never wagged his tail, suddenly did. There was no doubt he was hers.”

With that, Ziggy went back to a family that had never forgotten him, and called him Toby.

“There wasn’t a dry eye in the building,” the staff said.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Shelter dog reunited with former family, four years after he went missing

By Paula Wethington

Click here for updates on this story

    DETROIT (WWJ) — A dog that had been living for over a year in a shelter with Friends of Michigan Animals Rescue was reunited with his former family.

After 387 days in the Belleville animal rescue shelter, the dog called Ziggy had become the shelter’s longest resident, according to the details related on the rescue agency’s social media accounts.

The staff knew that the dog was surrendered into shelter care when his owner had to enter long-term memory care. But the canine’s story began long before that – it turns out that he was lost from a Dearborn Heights family about four years ago. And that’s who eventually came to claim him.

“Over a year passed, and we couldn’t understand how such a gentle, affectionate dog was still here,” the staff said.

“Shelter life wore him down. He barely lifted his head when people walked in. We tried everything to help him feel safe … but he was waiting for something he couldn’t name.”

A photo of the dog looking at Christmas tree ornaments that was circulating on Facebook as part of a shelter promotion to find new homes for their animals got in front of the right people. A message was sent to the shelter with the author saying Ziggy might actually be her dog Toby, who ran away four years ago.

The shelter looked over photos she submitted of the dog as a puppy, showing the markings on his face and body.

“She came to meet him,” the shelter staff said. “Ziggy, who almost never wagged his tail, suddenly did. There was no doubt he was hers.”

With that, Ziggy went back to a family that had never forgotten him, and called him Toby.

“There wasn’t a dry eye in the building,” the staff said.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.