Thursday, September 15, 2016

THE HERO WHOSE VALOR WAS STOLEN BY LENNY PEREZ

El Rrun-Rrun Files
Fifteen years ago, after the collapse of the Queen Isabella causeway, when plaudits rained down upon the firefighters and EMS personnel who rescued the victims from the drink below, Brownsville Fire Department Chief Lenny Perez proudly received recognition from then-U.S. Congressman Solomon Ortiz for and other entities for the gallant rescue of the victims.

Perez accepted the congressional resolution for the firefighters and EMS personnel but failed to mention to the assembled crowd that they hadn't been notified of the impending ceremony and that he had decided to accept it in public on their behalf.
Partly as a result of the media coverage, Perez was elevated from interim chief and selected from among four others to head the BFD.

"He said that if they recognized one or two the rest of the firefighters would be resentful so he decided to receive the recognition himself," said a firefighter who was at the rescue scene. "They claimed they couldn't locate them, when in fact some of them were on duty at the time."
On that day 15 years ago, the firefighters and paramedics arrived to find that a 240-foot section of the causeway had been knocked down by a runaway barge and that several cars were already sunk in the waters below some 80 to 90 feet into the dark waters of the Laguna Madre.

When the BFD firefighters arrived, there were Port Isabel and Los Fresnos units at the scene. The two EMS personnel from Los Fresnos, a former Marine and a former Navy veteran, were peering into the dark.
"You could see that some of the headlights were still on in the cars underwater," said one. "We could tell that there was nothing we could do for the people in those cars because the cars were piled on top of each other."

Although some of the drivers and passengers in the cars were able to be saved, some by swimming away on their own, firefighters were unable to see whether the driver of a two-door gray sedan that was teetering on a concrete abutment below was still alive.
"We couldn't tell," said one. "He looked like he was dead."
The firefighters were only able to tie several ropes to the car, an unacceptable method to stabilize the car in case of a rescue attempt.

"When we were talking about the man being probably dead, he made a movement to let us know he was still alive," recalls the firefighter. "At that point, neither the ex-Marine nor the Navy veteran volunteered to take the risk of going after the man on the unstable car."

A Brownsville firefighter recalls that one of his company was just getting on the scene when they noticed that J.P. Montoya, then working part-time as a Port Isabel EMS paramedic looked in the car and started making his way to the trapped motorist.
"He didn't think twice about it," the firefighter recalled. "The car wasn't stable with just those ropes but he went in after him anyway."

Montoya reached the sedan and spoke to the man, who was badly injured as a result of the of the impact with the remnants of the bridge above and the plunge to the bottom. The impact had been so great that the motor had become detached form the car and was lying on the side on the concrete separated from the car.
He climbed in through the broken windshield without a life vest or ropes to reach the injured man.

"He was pleading with me not to leave him there to die," Montoya recalled. "He was a big guy and when I went in the car and tried to pull him out his foot was wedged in the wreckage. Try as I might I couldn't get him loose because his foot was smashed and stuck."

With the man pleading with him not to leave him, Montoya opted to take drastic measures.
"I could see his foot was useless and that he was already bleeding profusely and he was going into shock," he said. "So I pulled and pulled and broke his leg until I could pull him free."

Then, using all his strength to pull the dying man out of the car, the firefighter pulled the large victim out and hauled him across his back and then out to a waiting Coast Guard boat which took him to shore and into an ambulance to get him to the hospital. That was Gaspar H. Hinojosa, they later found out.

"Nobody else wanted to go in there and he did," they all agreed.
Hinojosa died on the way to the hospital, but the man's relatives were glad that the firefighters had rescued him from the murky waters of the Laguna.
A few hours later, the concrete base of the causeway where the car had teetered and Montoya had climbed in to retrieve the victim collapsed into the currents below.

At the time Perez was interim chief after Raul Salazar was suspended on suspicions of wrongdoing. He was later convicted of a felony and later went to work as an administrative assistant to Cameron County Precinct 2 Commissioner Ernie Hernandez.

When the time finally came around and entities began issuing proclamations in recognition of their bravery, Montoya – working for the BFD as a firefighter and with Port Isabel as an EMS paramedic – was unceremoniously handed his congressional resolution by his supervisor i a hallway at the firehouse.

Even though the certificate of congressional recognition singled out Montoya and another firefighter for their bravery, they were not invited to the ceremony and Perez accepted it on their behalf instead.

"We had just finished with a cardiac case and were getting back to the fire house when my supervisor Robert Perez came into the dormitory and handed me the congressional award," Montoya recalled. "He told me that they had had a big ceremony at City Hall but that the chief had told them that they couldn't find us. All that time the presentations were made we were kept away on duty."

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Lenny Perez was a incompetent buffoon that Charlie Cabler loved.That dummy would panic at calls screaming like an idiot

Anonymous said...

Just another "Great Moment In Being Mexican."

Anonymous said...

P.O.S.
Seems it's a requirement to make chief.

Unknown said...

Gaspar S. Hinojosa was my dad. J.P. Montoya and his partner deserve to be recognized. How can we make this happen?

Anonymous said...

A TRUE HERO SEEKS NO RECOGNITION! Example, the recent shooting in an up-state gay club, the media was all over that coverage simply because it was an alleged muslim that shot all those homo's. Yet everyday constantly , wounded soldiers come back from the war zone with missing limbs, disabilities, even dead, etc but no media coverage to give them a voice to be heard. Very unfair for the true hero's , yet a fag gets grazed by a bullet and they're all over the news outlets demanding more rights......

Anonymous said...

Mrs. Huerta, thank you for your kind words, but we were recognized by your family and thanked personally, the recognition was that your family understood that our efforts went above and beyond what we thought physically and mentally we could endure, in the end we wish the outcome was different... Thank you and your family for never forgetting...God bless

Unknown said...

God Bless you, too!

Unknown said...

My son's Father is a true hero!! We are so proud of you JP!!

Anonymous said...

Does anyone know the name of JP’s partner? The guy that was on the pillar with him?

rita