Cops Save Lives | Cops Save Lives | Cop Saves Life

Life Saving Incident

June 26, 2020
Louisiana
Bossier Parish
NA

Deputy John McClain – yep, with the same name as the hero in the “Die Hard” movie series played by Bruce Willis, doesn’t see himself as a hero…but what he did would certainly put him in the class of heroic acts. Deputy McClain had just graduated from the Bossier Parish Sheriff’s Training Academy and was finishing his final week of Correctional Academy as he was heading to work around 6:30 a.m. on Friday, June 26, 2020, heading north on Barksdale Blvd. While he was driving his personal vehicle, he noticed a train heading in the same direction. “I was going about 45 miles per hour and I was able to pass the train which I think was going about 35 miles per hour,” McClain recalled. As he noticed the train, John said he began to think about how someone committed suicide by train a couple of months ago. “I think that played a part in being in me being extra observant about the train tracks and people trying to do that,” he said. McClain said when he approached the traffic lights near Cascio’s Food Mart about one-quarter mile from I-20, he noticed a young man sitting near the tracks. He was facing the train, and it headed north parallel to Barksdale Blvd. John said he could not actually see if the man was actually on the tracks, but what he saw was enough to alert him. McClain, who just graduated from the police academy, said this is where his training began to kick in. He said he parked his truck on the side of the road, put his flashers on, and immediately got out of the truck and headed over to talk with the young man, who was sitting in the middle of the train tracks. “I tried talking to him, but he didn’t respond,” McClain said. The train was steadily heading their way, and John knew he had to do something quickly…or else. “I had only had like three to five seconds to act, so I grabbed him by his armpits and just pulled him out of the way of the train.” Within seconds, the KCS train passed them both. John’s quick action saved the life of this young man. He took the man to his nearby home and contacted the Bossier City Police Department to report the incident. And for this heroic stop, John was now late for class. But the training leadership was elated that Dep. McClain made that decision to help another human…and save his life. “His actions may have surprised him, but they did not surprise me,” said Captain Sarah Rhodes, BPSTA director. “He has been a standup person since day one of training. And I believe I’m not even sure that John McClain would have acted any differently had he not been in law enforcement.” John says his heart was racing and that he was nervous that he wasn’t going to beat the train. The image of what could have happened he says wasn’t a pretty sight. He was just glad he was in the right place at the right time to save a man’s life. “Just very thankful to God I was there in time to help him.

The history of law enforcement in the United States is a long and wonderful history of bravery. This website is dedicated to documenting the heroic deeds of law enforcement officers throughout the United States who have either given or risked their lives to save others. There are many stories of bravery and heroism for many who are considered first responders. However, it is those in law enforcement who are most likely to be the first to arrive upon a location requiring life saving acts engaging dangerous hostage takers, running into burning buildings/vehicles, providing first aid to seriously injured victims, saving near drowning victims and much more are what the women and men of law enforcement do routinely and at many times, great peril to their own safety.
It is our mission to document the history of lives saved by those dedicated women and men in law enforcement. To share with others the dramatic deeds of those individuals who are the first, first responders. It is so important for our citizens to understand that law "enforcement" is not always about enforcing the law but rather being there when our citizens need us.
It is to this end we are dedicated to promoting documentation regarding the history of law enforcement and the lives they have saved.