By Army Sgt. Leticia Samuels North Carolina National Guard
DURHAM, N.C., October 9, 2015 — The Durham County Sheriff’s
Office and the North Carolina National Guard both have important roles in
public safety within the state of North Carolina.
What they share in this case is Pfc. David Earp, Company B,
1st Battalion, 120th Infantry Regiment who plays dual roles as an infantryman
and a sheriff’s deputy.
Earp is a Durham native and five-year veteran with the
sheriff’s office here. He assisted two young female children after their father
allegedly attempted to drown them on the night of Sept 20, 2015, at the Audubon
Lake apartments.
“I am a school resource officer assigned to Jordan High
School,” Earp said. “It’s something I have wanted to do since I was a small
kid. I have always been one to try to help people.”
A Call for Help
Sylvia Scott, Audubon Lake apartment property manager,
notified Earp -- who was off duty at the time -- about the situation occurring
nearby. Scott already called 911 but realized Earp was nearby.
“I put my clothes on, a sheriff shirt, grabbed my gun, badge,
radio and flashlight,” Earp said. “I got in my car and went down to the
location.”
Upon arrival to the lake, cries were heard and Earp
discovered the older of the two children above water crying and the younger
child was submerged completely under water.
“I thought to myself, ‘What in the world is going on here?’”
Earp said. “I shined my flashlight to the area, dropped some of my equipment,
ran out there and grabbed both of them.”
He quickly scooped up both children out of the lake and
guided them to dry land where he directed Scott and her son to stay with the
older daughter, not wanting her to witness her younger sister who was
unconscious at the time.
“I took the other girl away so she wouldn’t have to see her
sister, I took her to the gazebo,” Earp said. He then told Scott, “Make sure
she is breathing and talk to her, try to keep her calm.”
While Scott kept the older daughter calm, Earp and other
responding officers began CPR on the younger child and took turns performing
CPR for about 15 minutes until emergency responders and medical personnel
arrived.
“It made me feel really good and it made me realize how
blessed I am to be in the right spot at the right time, to get there within a
few moments and save them,” Earp said.
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