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Man wrongfully jailed for a year on false charges rescues cop from burning car

BrightVibesJul 5, 2020, 12:12:24 PM
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"There is value in every human life. We are all children of God and I can't imagine just watching anyone burn," said Daylan McLee of his brave and selfless deed.

Pennsylvania Man Pulls Police Officer From Burning Car

A Pennsylvania man once falsely accused of pointing a gun at a police officer recently saved a cop from a burning car, according to reports. “No matter what other people have done to me, or other officers, I thought, ‘this guy deserves to make it home safely to his family.’” said Daylan McLee, of Fayette County, PA.

Several of Officer Jay Hanley's relatives had thanked McLee on social media Sunday and Monday, noting the officer was undergoing surgery after the crash for a serious leg injury.

Uniontown Police Lt. Thomas Kolencik's voice cracked as he told WTAE-Pittsburgh at the scene Sunday that the department was thankful McLee was nearby when the crash happened. "Daylan actually said, 'I'm not going to let him die,'" Kolencik told the TV station. "There's just no words to describe, you know." McLee said Hanley's sister had called to thank him, along with a handful of officers and even the police chief.

McLee had Herculean strength, "I don't know what came across me...”

Daylan McLee —who spent a year in jail awaiting trial on false charges, accused of pointing a gun at a cop — was at a family Father’s Day cookout when he heard an almighty crash, looked outside and saw the police officer pinned to the ground by his cruiser following the collision.

“I know this man is my brother through Christ, and I couldn’t leave him behind,” McLee told KDKA. “There were people outside screaming. We felt it in the house. It was like a jolt.”

Bystanders say in the moment, McLee showed Herculean strength as he dragged the police officer from the car before it caught fire.

McLee says he had one thought. "I don't know what came across me, but I ripped the door open and just pulled him to safety across the street,"

Officer Jay Hanley of the Uniontown Police Department was in the mangled car and is expected to make a full recovery. Hanley’s family and the city say they’re grateful and credit McLee with saving the police officer’s life.

Source: CBS/KDTA

“I know this man is my brother through Christ, and I couldn’t leave him behind,” McLee told reporters.

Source: CBS-Local

McLee (left) with tattoos visible on his neck and arms and twisted dreads that reach below his chin, had spent a year in jail before a jury acquitted him on the charges. Uniontown police are asking for prayers for officer Hanley and the other driver.

McLee spent a year behind bars before a jury acquitted him of all charges

According to the New York Post, McLee, a father of two, had previous run-ins with the police, including being arrested in March 2016 outside an American Legion bar in Dunbar, PA, where a fight had broken out. A Pennsylvania State Police trooper had said that McLee pointed a weapon at him twice.

However, security footage showed that McLee had in fact disarmed a man at the scene, and then quickly discarded the gun.

McLee spent a year behind bars before a jury acquitted him of the charges after reviewing the video, according to the AP.

He filed a lawsuit in late 2018 against four troopers for wrongful arrest. The suit claims the officers lied in a police report about the incident and falsified charges against McLee after one of the troopers fired two shots at him and hit a nearby house.

A few months prior, McLee had another encounter with police, in which he said he ran from a porch gathering after plainclothes cops approached with guns drawn. The cops did not announce they were officers, and he stopped running and put his hands behind his head when they yelled they were police, McLee said.

He said he was charged with fleeing and resisting arrest, and that an officer kicked him in the face through a fence, splitting his lip, as he was being taken into custody. McLee said the use of force was caught on a security camera and he plans to fight the charges.

Still, he stressed the importance of forgiveness, saying he couldn’t blame every police officer for bad interactions he had with any others.

“We need to work on our humanity…,” McLee said. “You can’t base every day of your life off of one interaction you have with one individual.”

Source: NewYorkPost

“Not all people are bad.”

After saving an officer's life, 31-year-old Daylan McLee said he wants more people to look at individuals and not judge all police based on one interaction. “To teach humanity, teach children that it’s OK to reach out to officers. Not all of them are bad, not all people are bad,” McLee said.

“I don’t want to be called a hero. I just want to be known as an upstanding man.”

Uniontown Police Lt. Thomas Kolencik’s voice cracked as he told WTAE-Pittsburgh that the department was thankful McLee was nearby when the crash happened.

“Daylan actually said, ‘I’m not going to let him die,’” Kolencik told the TV station. “There’s just no words to describe, you know.”

Several of Officer Hanley’s relatives have thanked McLee for his heroic act, as have other cops and even the police chief. Officials said Hanley is recovering after undergoing surgery for a serious injury to his leg that he sustained during the crash.

After the collision, McLee said he thought he had spoken to Hanley maybe three weeks earlier when the officer was on patrol.

“I realized after, that I’d seen him. He speaks to people; he says hello; he isn’t an officer that harasses anybody. He commented to me about the heat was coming for us,” he said.

McLee said he is trying to teach his 13-year-old son Avian not to judge others for the color of their skin, what job they have or what other people may say about them.

“Some people may think I look intimidating… and I can’t hate the trooper who shot at me for what he doesn’t know,” McLee said.

“I don’t want to be called a hero. I just want to be known as an individual who is an upstanding man. No matter… what or where, just an upstanding person,” he added. “And I hope (that trooper) sees this and knows he’s forgiven.”

Source: NewYorkPost 

Bystander rescues officer from burning car wreck

Bystander Daylan McLee is being hailed a hero for rushing in to save a police officer from burning car wreck after the officer and another vehicle crashed Sunday in Uniontown, Pennsylvania.

Source: YouTube/AP

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