Wisconsin Police Officer Runs into Burning House, Rescues Dog

As soon as he pulled up to a house on fire in Tilden, Wisc., Friday night, Chippewa Falls Police Officer Craig Mantzke wasted no time running into the burning home.

“Officer Craig Mantzke was first to arrive on scene and bravely entered the residence, which was fully engulfed in flames,” wrote the Chippewa Falls Police Department on its Facebook page yesterday. “Officer Mantzke forced his way inside, searching for people through the smoke and flames.”

A dashcam video shows Mantzke’s patrol car approaching the house and the officer running into the burning structure. Video from his body camera shows him searching the house as it fills with smoke.

After the video ends, Mantzke found an 8-year-old Shih Tzu named Maggie gated in the kitchen area and helped her escape.

“I think if we were in the same position we’d be absolutely elated if someone was able to save our pet or do what they could to save our pets,” Mantzke told WEAU. “Those are a big part of families.”

No other members of the Sullivan family, who have lived in the house for 12 years, were home at the time of the fire. The house was a total loss, but the family told WEAU they’re thankful no one, including Maggie, was hurt. A GoFundMe campaign has been launched to help the family recover.

A composite of the dash cam and body cam videos that was posted on the Chippewa Falls Police Department’s Facebook page yesterday has been viewed more than 77,000 times as of this morning.

Photo via Facebook

NYPD Officers Rescue Injured Pit Bull on Grand Central Parkway

When NYPD officers Melissa Mezzoiuso and George Morina-Blocker responded to a 911 call Monday morning about a “vicious” dog on Grand Central Parkway during rush hour, what they found was a brindle Pit Bull sitting in the middle of a westbound lane on the busy thoroughfare.

Morina-Blocker blocked traffic with their patrol car, and Mezzoiuso got out and approached the dog.

She realized he “was not ‘vicious’ but rather frightened and injured,” the NYPD News reports.

Mezzoiuso gently lifted the dog and carried him to the side of the busy parkway, then she and her partner decided to drive the 6-month-old pup, who they named “Rocky,” to a local ASPCA office.

Rocky was then transferred to the ASPCA hospital in Manhattan, where veterinarians determined his left front leg had been broken.

Morina-Blocker and Mezzoiuso stopped by for a visit yesterday, before the lucky pooch had surgery on his leg. Rocky “will continue to receive around-the-clock care as he recovers from his injury,” an ASPCA spokeswoman told the Queens Courier.

According to the New York Daily News today, Rocky has been renamed Huxley to avoid confusion with another dog in the hospital who has the same name. He is recovering from his surgery.

The ASPCA is trying to locate his owner, and asking anyone with information about Rocky to call 212-876-7700. In the meantime, adoption offers are flowing in.

“We urge anyone with information about Rocky to please come forward,” the ASPCA spokeswoman said. “Thank you to the officers of the 110th Precinct who rescued a dog in need and brought him to safety at the ASPCA.”

Photos via TwitterTwitter

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