Hero of the Boston bombings : Carlos Arredondo saved lives after blasts rocked his home city

An inspirational anti-war protester whose soldier son died in Iraq and another took his own life is being hailed a hero after he selflessly rushed to help victims of the Boston Marathon bombings seconds after the attacks.

Costa Rican immigrant Carlos Arredondo has described how, as most people ran for their lives, he vaulted a fence to get to spectators, many of whom had lost limbs, and used his clothes and towels to stanch victims' bleeding.

'I jumped the fence after the first explosions and all I saw was a puddle of blood and people with lost limbs,' he told ABC News. 'I saw adults, much younger than myself -- ladies, men, pretty much everyone was knocked out.'

Mr Arrendono helped one victim, who was missing both his legs and drenched in blood, into a wheelchair that race medical staff had brought and said he kept talking to the man so he wouldn't lose consciousness.



'I kept talking to him. I kept saying, "Stay with me, stay with me,"' Mr Arredondo, who is a member of the Red Cross disaster team, told Maine Today.

A graphic photograph shows the hero seemingly pinching shut the femoral artery on one of the man's part-severed legs using his hand as they rush him to ambulances.

The 'catastrophic' scene wasn't the first time the 52-year-old's life has been rocked by a blast.

Mr Arredondo's eldest son, 20-year-old Lance Corporal Alexander Arredondo died in action nine years ago.

The father was dealt another devastating blow, when his second son Brian, 24, committed suicide just before Christmas 2011 as the final troops withdrew from the war which killed his brother.

Brian had suffered with depression and battled drug addiction ever since Alexander's death.

The day he learned his elder son had been killed, which also happened to be his 44th birthday, Mr Arredondo ​locked himself in a van with five gallons of gasoline and a propane torch and set the van on fire.

He survived, became a peace activist, and legally changed his name to Alexander Brian Arredondo in tribute to his sons. In 2006 he became an American citizen.

When the bombs went off yesterday, Mr Arredondo and his wife Melida Arredondo were in the VIP stands near the Boylston Street finish line of the marathon.

They were waiting for the last of the National Guard runners, representing Run for the Fallen Maine, an organization established to honor Marines who have been killed since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. One of those runners had dedicated the race to Mr Arredondo's son.

They were also there to support suicide awareness group, Samaritans, which had a number of runners competing.

But instead, they watched in horror as more than 176 runners and bystanders were injured at the finish line and at least three killed.

'There was blood on the floor, blood everywhere. Then what you saw was ribs, everywhere, I mean everywhere...' Mr Arredondo said afterwards.

'The device, the IED, went down and then it went up.'



Mr Arredondo immediately sprinted into action after the bombs detonated, and he can be seen in a series of photos and videos of the aftermath rushing to one of the two bombing sites, then pulling debris and fencing away from the bloody victims, clearing the way for emergency personnel to tend to their wounds.

According to Reddit, the male victim Mr Arredondo is helping in a now-iconic photograph is in critical but stable condition at Boston Medical Center.

Jeff Bauman Jr., 27, had been watching his girlfriend compete in the race when the devastating blast went off, changing his life forever.

A friend of Jeff's updated anxious Reddit users of his condition and another user posted a heartbreaking Facebook message from the victim's father, who was in Concord, NH. at the time of the explosions.

'Can everyone pray for my Son Jeff jr who was at the finish line today in Boston,' Jeff Bauman Sr. wrote late last night. 'He is in surgery right now with injuries to his legs. I just can't explain whats wrong with people today to do this to people. I'm really starting to lose faith in our country.'

At around 9 a.m. today, Mr Bauman Sr. gave another update to concerned friends and family.

'Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers, they did help greatly. Unfortunately my son was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. He had to have both lower limbs removed due to the extensive vascular and bone damage.

'I was with him last night and am heading back down to Boston - Boston Medical Center to be with him today. He went back into surgery last night at midnight for exploratory due to fluid in his abdomen. He came out at 2:30 and doctors informed us he was doing better. Thanks again to all you guys and girls, my friends. I'll keep you informed. Jeff B.'

Other Reddit users asked if Jeff had health insurance, suggesting that readers could start raising money to pay for his medical bills if he didn't.

Without Mr Arredondo's help, Jeff, whose face is ghostly pale in the photograph having been drained of blood, may not have been so lucky.

Mr Arredondo was badly shaken and trembling as he gripped a small American flag drenched in blood talking to bystanders on the street about the explosion.

He described helping a victim by ripping up a T-shirt to fashion a makeshift bandage.

Melida Arredondo became emotional as the memory of her stepsons' deaths came flashing back for her and her husband.

'They were very close -- Irish twins,' she told ABC News.

She said Alexander's death in Iraq shook the entire family. Mr Arrendondo suffered burns to 26 per cent of his body after setting his van alight and attended his son Alexander's funeral on a stretcher.

After his son's death in Iraq, Mr Arredondo drove a pickup truck around the country to protest against the wars.

Carrying a flag-draped coffin and photos and mementos of Alexander, including a football and his Winnie the Pooh toy, he became one of the most visible and poignant dissident to the conflicts.

'As long as there are marines fighting and dying in Iraq, I'm going to share my mourning with the American people,' he told the New York Times in 2007.


But his other son Brian couldn't cope without his brother, taking his own life in 2011.

'He was never quite the same after his brother's death,' Melida Arredondo said.

Monday's grisly scene reminded Mr Arrendondo of a war zone, he told ABC News.

'It was like an IED [improvised explosive device],' he said.

'It broke everybody's legs. Two ladies at my left side were knocked unconscious. They lost their legs. I was putting pieces of clothing on their legs to stop the bleeding and called for assistance. Someone came and we helped get them in wheelchairs.'

Ms Arredondo, a public administrator who sought shelter on the opposite side of the street, said she wasn't surprised her hero husband rushed to help the wounded.

'I know my husband, and he would go right in,' she told ABC News. 'They opened all the barricades that were keeping the public away. There were shards and people cut and injured.'

She said she initially couldn't find her husband and became concerned because spectators and bystanders were struggling to get cell reception in the chaos.

'I couldn't even get a text to him,' she said. 'Then I saw him, covered in blood.'

Mr Arredondo was just one of the brave souls who helped out in the wake of Monday's devastation.

Gestures as small as offering a drink of orange juice and use of a home bathroom were recounted on Twitter in an ongoing online recollection of the fellowship that emerged.

'People are good. We met a woman who let us come into her home and is giving us drinks,' tweeted Ali Hatfield, a Kansas City, Missouri runner who was in town for the race.

As the city reeled from the tragedy that killed at least three and wounded more than 176, Bostonions seemed to steady themselves by reaching out to embrace those hurting even more.

'Two Lutheran pastors walking Commonwealth, Bibles in hand. For those who need comfort, they said,' tweeted Chelsea Conaboy, a Boston Globe blogger.

A Google Docs form was quickly set up to allow Boston residents to open their homes to marathon runners from outside the area who had no place to stay in the aftermath of the tragedy.

Anyone wanting to get out of the back bay come over plenty of tables and calm here and don't worry you don't have to buy a thing,' tweeted a local restaurant called El Pelon Taqueria. 'open wifi, place to charge cell, or just don't want to be alone, food and drinks,- pay only if you can #bostonhelp.'

Pictures of heroism and humanity flooded Twitter, from police officers carrying injured young children to the residents who left their warm homes to greet runners stranded by the emergency and offer them comfort.

'Local Boston resident giving @AliHatfield and us orange juice and offering a bathroom to use,' tweeted Ramsey Mohsen, a Kansas City, Missouri, Web strategist.

In a tweet hours later, Mohsen revealed how shaken he was by the blast, 'Only now has it hit me. Holding back tears best I can.'

Source: DailyMail

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