WTF?!? Rescuers Who Saved Ohio Woman From Burning Vehicle Sue Her

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Published August 02, 2011 | Associated Press

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Two men honored as heroes for rescuing a woman from her burning sport utility vehicle after it crashed have sued her, claiming they're physically and emotionally scarred.

The lawsuit, filed in central Ohio's Marion County by David Kelley and Mark Kincaid, seeks damages in excess of $25,000 for each man and claims that Theresa Tanner was at fault and that saving her life left the men with disabling injuries.

Kelley said the smoke and fire damaged his lungs so much that he can no longer carry a laundry basket upstairs in his home, The Columbus Dispatch reported.

The lawsuit, filed March 10, doesn't list an attorney for Tanner, who was critically injured in the crash but survived. No telephone listing for her in Marysville, the most recent address in court records, could be found Monday.

Her husband said the family wasn't commenting, the Dispatch reported.

Kincaid and Kelley were driving a truck south on U.S. Route 23 just southeast of Marion on March 11, 2009, when they saw debris on the road and smoke coming up an embankment, Kelley told the state Highway Patrol in a statement.

Kelley told investigators they pulled over and saw a Hummer engulfed in flames and a few people who were trying to get Tanner out of the vehicle but couldn't get the door open.

The woman in the front seat was "yelling for help and could not move," Kelley said. He stated he "saw the fire melting her hair" before he pulled her out the rear door.

"I could not breathe from smoke, and Mark carried her up the embankment away from the fire to safety," Kelley said.

He told the Dispatch the sounds of Tanner screaming and the sight of her hair melting to her head still haunt him.

"There isn't hardly a night that goes by that I don't wake up in a sweat -- that image in my mind," Kelley, a 39-year-old Marion truck driver, told the Dispatch.

The intense flames burned hair from Kelley's body and melted the cellphone in his pocket, he said.

Kelley did not immediately return calls from The Associated Press on Monday. Kincaid declined to comment when reached by telephone. Messages were left Monday for their attorney, Robert Wilson.

The Highway Patrol report of the crash indicated that Tanner, 28, told authorities that she had wanted to end her life that day after an argument and had crashed into a bridge guardrail. Tanner also told investigators she didn't remember anything after that, according to the report.

The lawsuit claims that Tanner operated her vehicle "intentionally and/or recklessly and/or negligently," resulting in the vehicle crashing and catching on fire. It claims that Kelley and Kincaid received "severe bodily injuries" as a result of Tanner's actions and that "all or some of these injuries are permanent in nature resulting in permanent disability."

The Highway Patrol honored Kelley and Kincaid for the rescue in an April 16, 2009, ceremony, and the commander of the Marion post at the time of the crash told the AP that the lawsuit was a surprise.

"That's the first time in my experience that I've heard of people going back and suing the person they rescued," patrol Lt. Chuck Jones said Monday.

He said he still believes the men needed to be honored for their bravery.

"I'm almost 100 percent certain that she would have perished in the fire if they had not pulled her from the vehicle," said Jones, who's now a criminal patrol commander in the Columbus area.
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http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/08/02/rescuers-who-saved-ohio-woman-from-burning-vehicle-sue-her/
 

imaginative

keep your eye on the ball
From what I heard- these guys were pretty messed up after this rescue. They are simply trying to get the drivers insurance company to pay their medical expenses as a result of this rescue. Interesting case; should the insurance company cover this?
 

Les

Inactive
If she intentionally crashed trying to end her life and they were injured rescuing her, then it was her fault. Will the insurance pay, maybe not if she intentionally crashed. Should thier injuries be covered by her or her insurance company. In my opinion, Yes.....Should they sue her to get covered, yes if that is what it takes....My opinion.
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
SOmeone I know had to sue THEIR OWN insurance company to get covered in an accident, once.

Of this is what they have to do to get reimbursed for their injuries, yeah, it's not REALLY about turning and screwing the person you saved.
 

Hansa44

Justine Case
This could be an interesting legal battle. If it's on record that she deliberately was ending her life than the insurance company could say these men interfered.

On the other hand, this idiot woman was screaming for help, so they did, without knowing what her actual intent was.


I'd say this woman is in some serious trouble. (on many levels)
 

Bolt

FJB
It may be that they (David Kelley and Mark Kincaid) suffered legitimate injuries when they rescued Theresa Tanner from her burning vehicle. The way many insurance companies are now days, their own insurance may have refused to cover their injuries and told them to seek damages from Tanner. Tanner's insurance may have taken a "Sue me" attitude and they complied.
 

Tygerkittn

Veteran Member
Since she was trying to kill herself and they thwarted her, I guess she'll counter-sue.
What a crazy world we live in!
 

ceeblue

Veteran Member
It may be that they (David Kelley and Mark Kincaid) suffered legitimate injuries when they rescued Theresa Tanner from her burning vehicle. The way many insurance companies are now days, their own insurance may have refused to cover their injuries and told them to seek damages from Tanner. Tanner's insurance may have taken a "Sue me" attitude and they complied.

I agree. They're are just taking the available recourse to pay their medical and related costs which likely have or nearly have impoverished them.

Reminds me of the saying that no good deed goes unpunished.

If we had a medical system like Canada, medical needs wouldn't also bring the curse of poverty.
 

WildDaisy

God has a plan, Trust it!
From what I heard- these guys were pretty messed up after this rescue. They are simply trying to get the drivers insurance company to pay their medical expenses as a result of this rescue. Interesting case; should the insurance company cover this?

The part left out of the story above is that the woman crashed in an attempt to commit suicide, and it was during that act that these men tried to save her, costing them money for injuries.
 

Ponce

Contributing Member
This 23 years old girl killed my attornys 9 year old kid on a skate board, and she sue the father for mental anguish, nightmare an so on..........I believe the insurance company gave her $5,000.
 

Brutus

Membership Revoked
The part left out of the story above is that the woman crashed in an attempt to commit suicide, and it was during that act that these men tried to save her, costing them money for injuries.

No it wasn't:

"The Highway Patrol report of the crash indicated that Tanner, 28, told authorities that she had wanted to end her life that day after an argument and had crashed into a bridge guardrail. Tanner also told investigators she didn't remember anything after that, according to the report."

:rolleyes:
 

Brutus

Membership Revoked
I agree. They're are just taking the available recourse to pay their medical and related costs which likely have or nearly have impoverished them.

Reminds me of the saying that no good deed goes unpunished.

If we had a medical system like Canada, medical needs wouldn't also bring the curse of poverty.

Yeah, we'd just die instead, waiting months for relatively routine stuff like heart catheterizations.

:rolleyes:
 

medic38572

TB Fanatic
It may be that they (David Kelley and Mark Kincaid) suffered legitimate injuries when they rescued Theresa Tanner from her burning vehicle. .

Bolt, That may be. But my question did they have a DUTY to act? Or were they acting on their own without do regard for their own safety? If they are acting on their own in order to save a live such as in this case without proper equipment or apparatus to breath with, WHO'S FAULT IS THAT?
 

buttie

Veteran Member
Good point Medic, but they also didn't have the training to know the danger they were placing themselves in. This is an example of the moral conundrum good Samaritans face. And I wonder what kind if nightmares they would have having just stood there and watched her burn? I know firefighters that have been is similar situations and it was/is still tough on them.
 

ceeblue

Veteran Member
Yeah, we'd just die instead, waiting months for relatively routine stuff like heart catheterizations. :rolleyes:

Good point. But it doesn't mean squat to those who can't afford medical care, or those who are hauled in when they are unconscious and then lose everything to the medical bills. And good luck getting elective surgery like gall bladder removal when you're broke.
 
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