California Army National Guard Pfc. Jesse Hernandez, whose
civilian job is a custody assistant for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department, saved 42 people from a burning bus on a Los Angeles freeway on Oct.
18, 2015. Hernandez is a rifleman with the California Guard's D Company
(Weapons), 1st Battalion, 160th Infantry Regiment, out of San Pedro, Calif.
(Photo by California National Guard
LOS ANGELES - Pfc. Jesse Hernandez doesn't think of
himself as a hero, but just about everyone else does, especially 42 people who
escaped from a burning charter bus after Hernandez forced open the bus's jammed
door.
Hernandez's actions resulted in television news
reports, a press conference and congratulations from his coworkers at his
civilian job and Soldiers in his unit. His heroics spread across social media.
He even got a call from "The Ellen DeGeneres Show."
"Everybody was more excited about it than I
was," Hernandez said. "I don't see myself any different."
Hernandez, 25, is a rifleman for the California
National Guard's D Company (Weapons), 1st Battalion, 160th Infantry Regiment,
out of San Pedro. On the civilian side, he works as a custody assistant for the
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department at the North County Correctional
Facility.
On the evening of Oct. 18, Hernandez was driving to
work on westbound State Route 60 in Hacienda Heights when traffic began to
slow. He saw smoke coming from a charter bus that was blocking the No. 3 and 4
lanes. Fire was coming out of the engine compartment.
As Hernandez drove up, he could see people inside the
bus were crowded toward the front, but no one was outside. Some of the
passengers were sticking their heads out of the emergency windows to escape the
smoke.
"I immediately pulled over," Hernandez said.
"I ran up to the bus and saw the bus driver inside kicking the door and
trying to open it."
Hernandez tried to open the door from the outside but
it was jammed. He felt around the door and found a handle, pushed it open and
told everyone to exit. By this time, smoke was pouring out of the bus.
Forty-two passengers, including several children, came
out the door, many of them thanking Hernandez for what he had done.
When the last person exited, Hernandez went inside and
checked for stragglers. The engine compartment at the rear of the bus was
engulfed in flames and the bus was entirely filled with smoke.
Hernandez found no one else inside. When he exited, firefighters
and deputies had arrived on the scene. Hernandez told them what had happened
and then got in his car and drove to work.
When he arrived at the correctional facility, his
lieutenant called him over. The lieutenant and everyone there had already heard
what had happened. The news had spread through the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department.
Television news stations picked up on the rescue and
it blew up on social media. Even the inmates at the correctional facility saw
the reports on television.
Two days later, Hernandez was at home sleeping after
working a 16-hour shift. He was awakened by a phone call telling him to head
over to the Los Angeles Hall of Justice to represent the department at a press
conference.
"They're proud of me for what I did,"
Hernandez said of the department, adding that his family and girlfriend told
him they are proud of him, too.
But for Hernandez, what he did just came naturally.
"I guess with all my training with the department and with the Army, it
seemed like a normal thing to do."
"I was happy that one of our guys was at the
right place at the right time to help others," 1st Sgt. Matthew Sprenger
said. "When we get good news it's a good thing. He did really well and
we're proud of him."
Hernandez said he had wanted to join the Army out of
high school but went to college instead. After landing the position with the
sheriff's department, he still wanted to be in the Army so he enlisted in the
Guard in 2014.
His goal in the military is to move up the ranks and
gain experience and knowledge. On the civilian side, his goal is to become a
deputy sheriff.
"My thing is to learn everything there is to
learn," he said.
By Capt. Jason Sweeney | California National Guard
http://www.nationalguard.mil/
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