December 17, 2013: Cecil Williams pets his guide dog Orlando in his hospital bed following a fall onto subway tracks from the platform in New York. The blind 61-year-old Williams says he fainted while holding onto his black labrador who tried to save him from falling. Both escaped without serious injury. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
A blind New York City man survived being run over by a subway train and credited his guide dog with saving his life.
Cecil Williams, 61, of Harlem, was at the 145th Street station at around 9:30 a.m. Tuesday when he began to feel faint. Despite the best efforts of the dog, a black Labrador named Orlando, Williams tumbled over the platform edge and onto the tracks.
'He went down, and the dog jumped down,' witness Matthew Martin told the New York Post. '[The dog] wasn't pulled. He was kissing him, trying to get him to move.'
Others on the platform alerted subway workers to Williams's plight. Authorities said a construction flagger told Williams to stay in a trough in the middle of the tracks. Less than a minute later, an uptown A train pulled into the station.
Authorities told the Post the train operator slammed on the brakes, but not before a car and a half passed over the spot where Williams and Orlando were. Remarkably, neither man nor dog suffered any serious injury. Transit officials pulled Orlando out from under the train before Williams was extracted with the help of a backboard and neck brace.
'The dog saved my life,' Williams told the Associated Press from St. Luke's Hospital, where he was taken with a cut on his head. 'I'm feeling amazed. I feel that God, the powers that be, having something in store from me. They didn't take me away this time. I'm here for a reason.'
Williams, who became blind due to meningitis in 1995, said he didn't know why he fainted, but noted he does take insulin and other medications.
According to New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA), 65 people have been fatally struck by subway, Long Island Railroad, and Metro-North commuter trains as of the end of August. Of those deaths, 40 were considered suicides. In 2012, 48 of the 84 deaths caused by trains were accidental.
bberitaa.blogspot.com contributed to this report. Click for more from the New York Post
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