A man who helped a family trapped following a crash later received a
bill in the mail for his unselfish act.
Paramedics sent him the first-responder fee of nearly $150 after he says
they only checked his pulse and gave him a bottle of water.
Derrick Deanda jumped into action when he encountered a rollover crash
in Elk Grove, California, that trapped a man and his three children
inside.
“I pulled up right as it happened,” he said. “There was a guy standing inside the van, because it was on its side, holding a 2 year-old infant.” Deanda broke the glass to free the family before paramedics arrived. Everyone was okay. But weeks later Deanda got a bill in the mail from the Cosumnes Community Services District with a $143 first-responder fee. Deputy Chief Mike McLaughlin says his district billed the good Samaritan.
“We’re obligated to provide the same level of service, the same billing
the same everything, for every patient we encounter,” he said.
Deanda became a patient, he says, when a paramedic at the scene checked
him out after breaking the van window to help save the family inside. Deanda had a small cut.
“This is truly a unique situation,” he said. “In my 28 years, this is my first time I’ve run into a situation similar to this.”
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