Bad day on highway? Call in the Air Force

By Schuyler Kropf , Andy Paras
The Post and Courier
Tuesday, September 29, 2009



Monday was a day of bad wrecks in North Charleston, but there was at least one angel wearing Air Force wings. She also was in full-speed running mode.

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An Air Force officer runs back to her car Monday on the Don Holt Bridge after asking drivers to move aside so an ambulance could get to the scene of an accident. If you have information about this officer, please contact The Post and Courier by sending an e-mail to newstips@postandcourier.com.

An unidentified Air Force officer helped clear more than a mile of stopped traffic on the Don Holt Bridge so an ambulance could get to the scene of an 18-wheeler wreck.

Then she left as suddenly as she came, without leaving a name. However, the image of that officer clearing cars, one by one, at a time when no one else was doing much, stayed with witness Peter Waters of Mount Pleasant.

"Everyone was sitting in their cars with no clue what to do," said Waters, who was among the hundreds of drivers stuck for hours during the morning rush. People did nothing even as the ambulance's lights and sirens flashed and blew, he said, trying to get through clogged lanes.

But things changed once the officer stepped forward.

"One by one, she directed each individual driver to move their car" so that the ambulance could gain a few feet, Waters said.

By prompting each car to inch into a more strategic spot, she opened a path until the ambulance finally made it to the scene, he said.

"Basically in about 10 to 15 minutes she cleared a mile of traffic," said Waters, who served in the Air Force during the Vietnam War.

What was equally impressive, he said, was that once the ambulance got through all those cars, the officer turned and went all the way back to her car at a full run.

"As she jogged by me, I held out my hand, said 'great job.' She said, thank you, and went jogging on back to her car," Waters said.

Do you know this Air Force officer?

If you know who this person is, please send us an e-mail.

"I just thought it was pretty impressive that she did it," Waters said.

Even more impressive was that she did her run in full uniform, including blue pants, short-sleeve shirt and black standard military dress shoes.

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The wreck was part of a string of collisions Monday that produced North Area gridlock. The first reports came from the Interstate 26 construction zone. Wrecks there caused a traffic backup nearly eight miles long involving at least three wrecks and 11 cars in the eastbound lanes of I-26, near Remount Road.

The other bad site was a three-car wreck that took place in the eastbound lanes of the Mark Clark Expressway at the Don Holt Bridge. That wreck had eastbound traffic stopped.

The driver of the 18-wheeler, who was assisted by the Air Force officer's deeds, became involved as he was traveling in the outside and westbound lane of the Mark Clark. He wrecked after slamming on his brakes to avoid rear ending several vehicles stopped in front of him watching the wreck on the other side, police said.

The truck driver was thrown from the cab of the vehicle and landed in the outside "eastbound" lane. Authorities think the fact that traffic was stopped in the eastbound lanes probably saved the truck driver's life. He was treated for non-life threatening injuries. His identification was unavailable.

Waters said Monday that the Air Force officer deserves a lot of individual credit for doing something when most everyone else on Monday sat dumbfounded in their vehicles.

"This is a perfect example of our military at work, doing a job that needed to be done and taking charge when no one asked," he said. "There had to be a couple of thousand people on that bridge and she was the one that stepped up. There are unsung heroes out there every day."

Reach Schuyler Kropf at 937-5551 or skropf@postandcourier.com.

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