http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...asing-kidnappers-car-BIKES.html#ixzz2YtH9PPmu http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Js_RQHKL_HQ
Yes! Love this, but I do hate the title. Why does it have to be 'rescued by black teen'? Like its surprise he happened to be black? Let the story tell itself. If it was a white teen, it would not say 'by white teen'.
What a true hero. He saw a little girl in trouble and didn't give up until she was safe. I'm glad he's getting the praise he so deserves. That precious baby girl is potentially alive because of him. :heart:
Terrific story and full kudos to the young men for recognizing that situation and doing something to stop some sick fuck from harming a child. Everytime I hear about these sickos it makes my skin crawl in anger, hope they catch the perp because he surely will try this with another child. Bloody creep is mentally damaged. Glad the young girl was safely returned home.
the title identifying the fact he is black is for paniro and stumper because they would swear up and down it was a conspiracy by the liberal media. awesome story. that is some serious ass biking to stay up with the car.
Great story. Love this quote. "If he wasn't going to stop, I was probably going to like, jump on the car." Boggs told ABC6. Way to go young men. Job well done.:smt038
Local Write-up on Temar and Kidnapping http://lancasteronline.com/article/...iled-as-a-hero-in-5-year-old-s-abduction.html (video interview with Temar if you click on the link) Temar Boggs had a feeling he'd find the 5-year-old girl who was abducted Thursday in Lancaster Township. He was right. Boggs, a McCaskey freshman who lives in Gable Park Woods, had been hanging out with a friend at nearby Lancaster Arms apartments and helping move a couch when a man came by asking if they'd seen a missing girl. They hadn't, Boggs said, so they went to watch TV. A short time later, his friend went outside and saw lots of police officers and people from the neighborhood looking for the girl. Police said that the girl had been taken that afternoon from the 100 block of Jennings Drive. Boggs and about six friends joined the search. Update: Man charged with kidnapping, sexual offenses in abduction of girl, 5 "We got all of our friends to go look for her. We made our own little search party," Boggs, 15, said Saturday, though he didn't know the girl or her family. They walked through some nearby woods and along a creek where they were told the girl might have gone. When Boggs and his friends returned to Lancaster Arms on Jennings Drive, they saw more police officers and TV news crews. "The whole block was filled," he said. That's when, Boggs said, "I had the gut feeling that I was going to find the little girl." A friend asked Boggs to hold his bike. Boggs figured the bike would help him search for the girl. So he and another friend, Chris Garcia, rode on area streets — Michelle Drive, St. Phillips Drive, Gable Park Road — looking for her. That's when a maroon car caught his eye. (He had gotten a bit ahead of Garcia.) Related: Pictures of massive search for missing girl The car was on Gable Park and turned around when it got near the top of a hill toward Millersville Pike, where Boggs said several police officers were gathered with the kind of cart used to carry an injured football player off the field. The driver, an older white man, then began quickly turning onto and out of side streets connecting to Gable Park, Boggs said. The neighborhood is something of a maze; many of its streets are cul-de-sacs. Boggs got close enough to the car to see a little girl inside. Garcia was nearby. The driver looked at Boggs and Garcia, then stopped the car at Gable Park and Betz Farm Road and pushed the girl out of the car. The driver then drove off, Boggs said. Boggs said he didn't see where the car went. "She runs to my arms and said, 'I need to see my mommy,' " Boggs said. Boggs scooped the girl onto his shoulders and began riding the bike toward home, but then decided that wasn't safe, so he carried her and walked back while Garcia pedaled along, guiding the bike Boggs had been using. Update: Hero in child abduction case handles acclaim Back at Lancaster Arms, when Boggs and Garcia arrived with the girl, someone summoned a firefighter or law enforcement officer. Boggs said the girl was reluctant to leave him and go to the official. "She didn't want to leave me because she thought they were going to do something to her. I said, 'No, it's OK,' " he said. Police said later that the abductor took the little girl for ice cream, and that there were indications of an assault. Boggs met the girl's family Thursday evening, after he told police his story. The girl's family members "were just saying that I was a hero, that I was a guardian angel and that it was amazing that I was there and was able to find the girl," he said. Boggs doesn't see himself as a hero. "I'm just a normal person who did a thing that anybody else would do," he said. He described himself as a typical kid. He plays football, basketball and track (he runs the 100- and 200-meter and the 400-meter relay, and does the high and long jump). He likes sneakers, and if his hopes of being a professional athlete don't pan out, he'd like to be a clothing or sneaker designer. Or maybe work in the culinary arts. He's modest, but knows he did something special Thursday. "It was like fate, it was like meant for me and Chris to be there. If we wouldn't have left (to look for the girl) who knows what would have happened to the little girl," he said. Boggs did wake up in the middle of the night afterward, though, thinking he might have saved the girl's life. "It was a blessing for me to make that happen," he said. His mother, Tamika Boggs, said she's proud of her son. "You just hope you raise your child the right way. ... He's learning what I tell him, to help others," she said
Don't you LOVE it when a person puts their own safety to the side to help another person out, regardless of the possible danger?! :heart: to the heroic young boy!
They even brought it on tv in Germany, so it did get international attention actually. What a great boy :smt023
Yes!! I also have such an appreciation for what his mom said: "You just hope you raise your child the right way. ... He's learning what I tell him, to help others," THIS is what being a parent is all about IMO. I've gotten crap on here before for the fact that I'm raising my kids with the belief that they can actually make a difference, and that their gut reaction when someone's in danger should be to help...not to run and hide. This young mans actions just solidifies my belief that as parents we DO have an incredible impact on the character our children end up with. He is a true hero and its clear his mom has instilled a great sense of empathy for others in him. Kudos to her as well!