Wednesday, May 15, 2013

COP DOING THE WRONG THING THAT IS RIGHT

Many cities forbid firefighters to rescue a child’s cat that is stuck up in a tree, claiming that such rescues waste fire department time and resources. And I suspect that cops are forbidden to climb up trees to rescue cats, probably to prevent the risk of an officer getting injured.

NYPD officer Dane Natto may have given firefighters and his fellow cops a good laugh, but in getting stuck up a tree while trying to rescue a cat, he presented a favorable image of all cops, unlike the image portrayed by a smartass little fart who baited and videoed a Las Vegas cop that had parked his motorcycle on a sidewalk.

FDNY RESCUES COP STUCK IN TREE SAVING CAT. GOT IT?
By Dana Sauchelli, Kirstan Conley and Selim Algar

New York Post
May 14, 2013

An entire unit of laughing firefighters rescued an NYPD cop who got trapped in a tree yesterday — after the officer climbed up to save a scared cat and couldn’t get back down, officials said.

NYPD veteran Dane Natto and his partner responded to frantic 911 calls about a black and white stray feline in the boughs across from PS 213 in Oakland Gardens, Queens.

In front of a crowd of elementary-school students, Natto climbed the tree — but every time he got close to the cat, it scampered up beyond his reach, witnesses said.

“When the officer went up, the cat moved farther away from the trunk . . . There was no way he could get it,” said a witness, Jeff Yu, 22.

Once Natto was 30 feet in the air, he called off the chase — and yelled to his partner that he couldn’t get back down.

“We looked out the window, and we saw the cop inside the tree — sitting,” said Luna Giuong, 19.

“[His] partner was laughing at him,” she added.

Then Natto’s colleague put out a call for assistance from the FDNY.

Sources said dispatchers asked him to repeat what was going on — since they couldn’t believe what they were hearing.

When firefighters arrived, “they didn’t go straight to helping him,” Giuong said. “They all gathered around and laughed at him. They took their time just crowding around. It seemed the officer was enjoying himself.”

After the ribbing, the firefighters used a ladder to climb the tree — and grabbed the quivering cat first.

Then a smiling Natto climbed down the ladder — and the schoolkids broke out in applause.

The embarrassing ordeal took about 30 minutes.

“The Fire Department seemed to be having a good time with it,” Yu said. “[And] the officer seemed like he was having a good time.”

The cat was taken to a local veterinarian.

And other than his ego, Natto was unbruised.

“Everybody’s fine,” said FDNY spokesman Jim Long.

1 comment:

bob walsh said...

It is really easy to get cats out of trees. If they are really high up or the foliage is really thick you use buckshot. If they are lower down or the foliage is thin you use birdshot. Simple, low-tech, effective and safe for the rescuers.