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Airman earns medal for rescuing double amputee from flood

  • Published
  • By Samuel King Jr.
  • Team Eglin Public Affairs
In total darkness, with temperatures only in the high 30s and in the midst of a monstrous rainstorm, Tech. Sgt. Phillip Dyer waded into rapidly moving, chest-deep-and-rising waters to save a trapped flood victim on the verge of hypothermia and drowning.

That is how the explosive ordnance disposal instructor spent the night after Christmas 2015. Dyer, 366
th Training Squadron Detachment 3, was recently awarded the Airman’s Medal for his heroic efforts on that day.

"I have such great admiration and respect for Tech. Sgt. Dyer and it is an honor to serve with him," said Brig. Gen. Ronald Jolly Sr., the 82nd Training Wing commander from Sheppard AFB, Texas, who presented the award. "This Airman stepped up and put his life at risk to save the life of another. He deserves this medal and I’m proud I was able to present it to him."

Sheppard AFB is home to the 366th TRS.

Dyer was in rural Missouri visiting his older brother and family when the torrential rain began. The rain would eventually flood the only road and bridge to and from Dyer’s location. The flooding happened so quickly, it separated Dyer’s wife, son and sister-in-law, who’d gone into town earlier in the day.

That afternoon, it was determined Dyer’s family couldn’t return home. Throughout the rest of the day, Dyer and his brother checked the road and the bridge above the flooded creek to see if it was passable. At around 8 p.m., the brothers discovered a vehicle washed off the road and half submerged in the flooding waters.

“The only thing keeping it from washing away was an old barbed-wire fence,” said the 37-year-old Fort Walton Beach, Florida, resident.

The driver of the vehicle struggled through the current to get to his wife, Christi, who was a double leg amputee. The scene was visible only by Dyer’s vehicle headlamps on bright, the solitary visible light source around. The husband got Christi out of the vehicle and onto their roof. The man, in his 50s, looked exhausted from the effort, Dyer said.

The brothers were told by the 911 operator that due to their location, it would take paramedics and rescue an hour and a half to reach them.  Christi had been in and around the cold, rushing water for about 15 minutes at that time.

“In an hour and a half, she would be hypothermic or washed away,” said the 17-year Airman.

The husband and another man on the scene tried to rescue Christi, but could not carry her above the water. With the waters rising toward the couple’s roof and no chance to tow the vehicle without possibly losing his own, Dyer made a call. 

“I told my brother, ‘they are going to drown her, I am helping,’” Dyer said. “If we waited for rescue personnel, she would have either succumbed to the cold or been washed away. There was no more time to wait. She needed help right then.”  

When Dyer reached Christi, he said she was very cold and turning blue. The Airman took her from the two men and used a fireman carry to get her through the close-to-freezing current to a less, deeply flooded area. Then Christi began to panic.

“I carefully put her down and sat in the water with her,” Dyer said. “I explained to her ‘I can only help if you stay calm.’”

As this point, Dyer said much of his military training took over. The self-aid buddy care, combat life saver, operational risk management and his own EOD technician composure allowed him to accomplish the specific mission he had before him.

“My training helped me stay calm in a torrent of rushing water, pouring rain and darkness, not knowing when the situation could go from bad to worse,” he said.

He quickly briefed the two men, who’d attempted to rescue Christi earlier, on how to perform a chair carry. At this point, Christi was so weak, she couldn’t hold herself up. One man held her back, while Dyer and the other rescuer performed the carry to remove her from the current and get her to safety. 

“I was worried, at least up until I heard him take complete control of the situation,” said John Dyer, Phillip's brother.  “Once he got in the water, there was no misunderstanding who was in charge. Phillip may have been afraid, but the only thing he showed was calmness.” 

They immediately wrapped her up in a blanket and tried to warm her up. Christi and the rescuers went back to Dyer’s brother’s home to wait on the emergency responders. When rescue personnel arrived, they said Christi’s vehicle was totally submerged by the water. The water would rise another 8 feet before subsiding.

The following day, Christi’s son visited Dyer and personally thanked him for saving his mother’s life.

Dyer set aside the event as something that just needed to be done. He wrote it up as just another good enlisted performance report bullet. His former superintendent, retired Chief Master Sgt. Martin Cortez, saw the potential in the act and began the process to get Dyer recognized for his heroism. He received that recognition March 9. 

“It is amazing to see him finally honored and I couldn't be prouder," said Cortez, who attended the ceremony.

Dyer’s brother, John, who couldn’t attend the ceremony, also added praise for his brother and all military members.  

“If this is even a small cross section of the type of men and women serving our country, we should all be proud,” he said.

With the recent medal presentation and recognition, Dyer reflected on the moment and his decision.

“Airman's Medal or not, I would not change what I did, and if ever put in the same sort of situation, I would do it again,” Dyer said. “I am proud to be an EOD tech in the Air Force and I know any EOD tech when put in this situation would do the same.”