D
Deleted member 27505
Guest
Unless nothing to mark it with at the time; but dealing with a dead body (assumed at the time) isn't a priority. However if someone was outside the vehicle and next to the "body" already, why a cursory quick check couldn't have been made....not a detailed check, mind you, but a quick one......would be interesting to know. Or maybe one was made, and based on the initial look, the assumption it was a deceased was made.
My neighbor had the local volunteer fire department knock over his chimney with their ladder. It fell through the roof and crashed into his living room, narrowly missing crushing two people. Now, I kinda expect that sorta thing from the amped-up, overly eager local volunteer FD. But trained, highly paid professional firefighters? Identifying a body, not assessing whether or not is was living or in need of help, and then rolling a couple of rigs over it? I don't expect that. In fact, it frightens me. I understand that people make mistakes, but this seems a pretty egregious mistake. And I understand that this was a dynamic environment, but that's sort of the point of all the training, hm? Especially given that the body was clearly identified early on. To ignore (at least to the extent of not performing a basic assessment) seems highly unorthodox. And even if they had identified it as dead, it would've take a few seconds to pull it out of the way or place it in a vehicle. I wasn't there, so I'm not judging. But based on the evidence that is currently available, something doesn't smell right to me about how this was handled.