February 21, 2013 in Nation/World

Biden honors firefighters, police with Medal of Valor

Josh Lederman Associated Press
 
Associated Press photo

Vice President Joe Biden and Attorney General Eric Holder, in back at left, are seen after they presented the Medal of Valor to Paige Baitinger, widow of Sgt. Thomas Baitinger Wednesday.
(Full-size photo)

WASHINGTON – The incident started with a search for a colleague who went missing in Florida’s Osceola County Jail.

It ended when Reeshemah Taylor lunged at an inmate holding a gun to her head, throwing herself on top of her much larger attacker, disarming him and sparing countless lives in the process.

Officials later said the inmate’s plan that summer day in 2009 was clear: Walk out of the jail dressed as an officer, and shoot anyone who got in his way.

That deadly scenario never played out, and Taylor on Wednesday received the Medal of Valor for her role in averting it, along with 17 other police officers, firefighters and public safety officers granted the nation’s highest honor for risking their own safety to save or protect others.

“You all share – you’re all crazy, God love you – you all share a selflessness that’s not easy to explain, a commitment to your fellow man that’s rare, a bravery that inspires,” said Vice President Joe Biden, his voice gruff with emotion.

When Taylor, a corrections officer, walked into the room of the jail’s medical unit, she encountered a violent inmate serving three life sentences with no parole – a gang member with nothing to lose. The inmate had taken her fellow officer hostage, changed into the officer’s uniform and armed himself with the guard’s fully loaded semi-automatic handgun, aiming it squarely at Taylor’s head.

In a flash, she grabbed the gun with both hands and pushed it to the side while thrusting her knee into the inmate’s groin. He fell to the ground, dropping the weapon. That’s when Taylor jumped on top of him, putting him into a headlock while scissoring his legs with hers to keep him from getting up. With her spare hand, she grabbed her radio, and help was on the way.

That fearlessness in the face of danger was celebrated Wednesday as Biden draped the medals, suspended from purple- and yellow-striped ribbons, around the recipients’ necks. At his side stood Attorney General Eric Holder, who thanked for them standing on the front lines against crime, terrorism and threats to American communities.

There were more tears than smiles at the somber, bittersweet ceremony. Four of the recipients died in the line of duty, their actions remembered by family members and friends.

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