Trending Topics

N.Y. officer, firefighter/EMT save woman with no pulse after fire escape attempt

Syracuse Officer John Canestrare and Firefighter/EMT Rick Macheda performed CPR for 10 minutes before a pulse returned, saving the woman outside a burning home

US-NEWS-SHE-HAD-NO-PULSE-BUT-1-SMG.jpg

Syracuse police Officer John Canestrare and Cazenovia firefighter and EMT Rick Macheda worked as a team Friday morning to help save a woman who jumped to escape a house fire on the North Side.

TNS

By Vince Gasparini
syracuse.com

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Police Officer John Canestrare found a woman lying on the ground outside a burning house Friday morning and started giving chest compressions.

The woman had burns, Canestrare told syracuse.com | The Post-Standard. He said one of her feet was severely broken, so it was almost detached from her leg.

“It looked like she had jumped,” Canestrare said.

Around 9:15 a.m., Rick Macheda saw smoke as he drove near 105 Fourth North St. in Syracuse.

Macheda, a firefighter and EMT in Cazenovia with 40 years of experience, pulled over. Flames were shooting up from the house.

The two men barely exchanged any words before Macheda grabbed his medical bag from his truck and began to help Canestrare. They quickly became a lifesaving team for the woman, who was non-responsive.

“I checked for a pulse,” Macheda said. “There wasn’t any.”

The two were giving her CPR as the first firefighters arrived. Macheda asked them for a defibrillator. When he applied the electrode pads to the woman, he could not detect a heart rhythm, he said.

Canestrare continued to do compressions while Macheda secured an airway for the woman using medical equipment from his bag.

At one point, Canestrare got tired, so the two switched and Macheda began doing the compressions.

They kept going for about 10 minutes until EMTs arrived, Macheda said. They got her into an ambulance.

Canestrare, who has been on the Syracuse police force about four years, feared the worst. “Initially, I was like, ‘this is going to be a fatal fire,’” he said.

But soon after leaving, firefighters told them the EMTs found she had a pulse.

“So once we heard that she had a pulse, we were pretty grateful,” the officer said.

The two strangers, who had worked so hard to revive her, hugged.

“We shook hands and embraced each other several times saying, ‘holy cow, what just happened,’” Macheda said.

As of Monday afternoon, the woman was in critical condition at Upstate University Hospital, according to the Syracuse Fire Department. The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

On Sunday, Macheda said he’d heard from her daughter, who was driving up to Syracuse from Florida.

“That’s what I’ve been trained to do,” Macheda told syracuse.com. “For me, it’s just second nature to just dive in and start saving somebody, because that’s what we do.”

Trending
K-9
Under Fargo’s Law, those who injure or kill K-9s and horses now incur fines up to $20,000 and could go to prison for up to 15 years
“It’s a microphone, not an ice cream cone. Talk into it, don’t eat it.”
The Lawrence Police officer arrested the driver, who had also rammed his father’s vehicle after a family dispute
California topped WalletHub’s 2026 rankings for a third straight year, but officers across the country argued that support, morale and community backing matter more than salary and training metrics

©2025 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit syracuse.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Company News
New initiative provides dedicated resources and expert coaching to help police departments secure funding for advanced investigative tools