ahead, you ll meet a firefighter paramedic who is just a remarkable guy. he saved the life of a 7-year-old girl who is badly injured. could have easily died in the wake of the bombing. matt patterson is his name. he only recently got his p paramedic certification. he was in the right place at a bad time and knew exactly what to do. i get up, i run back to the sidewalk. there happens to be a gentleman standing there. just couldn t tell you who he was, spectator. i need your belt, i need your belt. without hesitation, this man ripped off his belt, gave it to me, took the belt, ran back over, applied a tourniquet.
the most important people here. the victims of this, the people who are right now facing the loss of a limb, who trying to rebuild their lives and also tell you the stories of the heroes who rose that day, who ran toward what many were running from. we talked to s.w.a.t. team members, first responders, firefighters. today i had a chance to speak to another one of those heroes, a firefighter paramedic named matt patterson. he was off duty the day of the attack, near the finish line near where the first explosion was. he was in a bar with his girlfriend when he heard the blast. he ran into the street, he immediately saw a child he would later learn that it was this little girl, a little girl in this picture, 7-year-old jane richard. her brother is 8-year-old martin richard, standing in front of his father there. martin of course died from his injuries. when matt reached jane, he saw that most of her left leg was gone, gone above the knee. he knew he had to act quickly to save her life. s
to the car, the driver of the car they hijacked. they have all this evidence that is completely admissible without any question, so you know, yes, it was understandable that given that this was a terrorist act, they wanted to find out immediately if there was something more, but once they found out there was nothing more, there was no reason to continue the interrogation. i got to go. we re way over time. mark geragos, appreciate you being on. jeff toobin as well. ahead, you ll meet a firefighter paramedic who is just a remarkable guy. he saved the life of a 7-year-old girl who is badly injured. could have easily died in the wake of the bombing. matt patterson is his name. he only recently got his paramedic certification. he was in the right place at a bad time and knew exactly what to do. i get up, i run back to the sidewalk. there happens to be a gentleman standing there. just couldn t tell you who he was, spectator.
they wanted to find out immediately if there was something more, but once they found out there was nothing more, there was no reason to continue the interrogation. i got to go. we re way over time. mark geragos, appreciate you being on. jeff toobin as well. ahead, you ll meet a firefighter paramedic who is just a remarkable guy. he saved the life of a 7-year-old girl who is badly injured. could have easily died in the wake of the bombing. matt patterson is his name. he only recently got his paramedic certification. he was in the right place at a bad time and knew exactly what to do. i get up, i run back to the sidewalk. there happens to be a gentleman standing there. just couldn t tell you who he was, spectator. i need your belt, i need your belt. without hesitation, this man ripped off his belt, gave it to me, took the belt, ran back over, applied a tourniquet. p coverage in america, with a new 2-year, 24,000-mile scheduled maintenance program, a 3-year, 36,000-mile bumper-to-bu
remembering, pausing to remember those who lost their lives and those whose lives have been forever changed. the boston bombings took a heavy toll on one family. 8-year-old martin richard was killed in the blast. his mother and sister badly wounded. the richards might have lost their little girl jane if it hadn t been for a firefighter paramedic from the lynn fire department off duty having a drink with his girlfriend when the bomb blast went off. he rushed in, he saw the little girl and he saved her life right after the second blast. i asked him about those moments. it was really the second blast when you realized. second blast, yeah, that took all doubts out of my mind. i immediately started running towards the front yelling for people to get back, get to the kitchen, get away from the windows. not pushing people back, but you know at the same time making it known i was going forward and they were going the other way. i get out to the patio and i don t know if it was just tunnel vi