Sailor climbs burning building to rescue a trapped resident

A sailor assigned to a nuclear submarine scaled the wall of a burning building to save an entrapped woman Tuesday, an act caught on video.

Nuclear Technician Petty Officer 1st Class Gabriel Nagy-Journey, a sailor assigned to the USS Albany in Norfolk, was driving home from work when he heard a woman screaming about a fire in the nearby apartment building in Norfolk, Virginia. 

He joined a group standing next to the burning apartment building, just beneath where an elderly woman was leaning out of a second-story window, with smoke billowing out.

Within seconds, Journey was boosted by two others up the wall, where he balanced on a row of bricks that created enough of a ledge to stand on and where he could reach the woman.

“We were gonna have her jump, but she was too scared. I got up there and pulled her out of the window,” Journey told WAVY News in an interview at the scene.

Subscribe to Task & Purpose today. Get the latest military news and culture in your inbox daily.

A video posted to Facebook page Paige Vs Dip shows Journey pulling the woman out despite flames and thick smoke billowing from the nearby windows.

Journey is a nuclear technician on the Albany and credited Navy training for his quick actions.

“It’s kind of what I train to at work on a daily basis, so the number one priority was getting as many people out as quickly as possible,” Journey told the TV station. 

The Albany is a Los Angeles-class attack sub-launched in 1987 and commissioned in 1990. The ship is based in Norfolk.

The two-alarm fire injured 2 and displaced 32 residents, WAVY reported. The call was first reported to emergency services at 2:10 p.m. 

The latest on Task & Purpose

Leave a Comment