A Georgia
sheriff is rewarding the inmates who saved their prison guard’s life
with something extra special: Shortened sentences for each of them.
“Anytime we have a trustee or inmate crew,
that goes beyond normal duties, we cut them some extra time off,” Polk
County Sheriff Johnny Moats told WXIA on Wednesday,
Each inmate will have his sentence reduced by about 25 percent.
PREVIOUSLY:
When a Georgia
deputy suddenly collapsed while on duty, the six inmates he had been
supervising could have made a run for it. But they chose instead to save
the officer’s life.
The group of inmates were out on a work
detail last Monday in a remote area of Polk County when their
supervising officer, who has not been identified, suddenly fell face-first on the ground, WXIA-TV reports.
Polk County Sheriff Johnny Moats said the
inmates could have easily taken the officer’s gun at that point and
escaped in his van.
“They could have done anything they wanted,” Moats
told Time. “They were out there by themselves with this one officer. If
they would have left him there, it could have been hours before anyone
came across him.”
Instead, the inmates rushed to revive the
deputy. The group opened the officer’s shirt and removed his bulletproof
vest to keep him cool. The humidity that morning had reportedly reached
100 percent.
The inmates also used the officer’s phone to call 911. Emergency medical services soon arrived on the scene.
The inmates have been credited with
helping to save the officer’s life. The deputy, who’s believed to have
collapsed due to the humidity and a previous medical condition, has
reportedly recovered and is now back at work,
“They stayed right there with
him,” Moats told Time. “If he didn’t have any help, I don’t know what
would have happened to him.”
The sheriff’s office said the
incident was especially meaningful given that Georgia prison guards
Christopher Monica and Curtis Billue were killed on June 13, allegedly by two inmates escaping a prison bus.
“As we watched the horrific
manhunt this week of the two inmates that killed two correctional
officers, we all know that Monday could have ended differently for our
officer,” wrote the sheriff’s office in a since-removed Facebook post.
But the inmates involved in the
officer’s rescue, all of whom all serving sentences for minor criminal
offences, said there was never any question of the path of action they
would take.
“When that happened, in my
opinion, it wasn’t about who is in jail and who wasn’t,” inmate Greg
WIlliams told WXIA. “It was about a man going down, and we had to help
him.”
As a token of gratitude, the officer’s family prepared lunch and desserts for the inmates last week, WSB-TV reported.
“The inmates did a really good job. I’m extremely proud of them,” Moats said.
No comments:
Post a Comment