Adam Finseth wouldn’t let fear get in his way — not from reaching out to make new friends, not from dancing in front of his high school classmates, and not from jumping into danger to help those around him.
Finseth, a Burnsville firefighter-paramedic, acted without hesitation in his last moments, too, when he descended with a SWAT team into a domestic violence call Feb. 18 and was shot to death after rendering aid to police. Officers Matthew Ruge and Paul Elmstrand were also killed.
“I saw you run into the line of fire to save me and my guys,” Burnsville police Sgt. Adam Medlicott said Wednesday at the funeral service for all three men. Medlicott, who was injured in the same incident but survived, called 40-year-old Finseth “the bravest person I have ever known.”
Friends and colleagues said Finseth was a caring man who was eager to serve others and seemed afraid of nothing.
His fearlessness was evident throughout his life, they said. In an obituary, his family remembered him as a “daredevil” as a child. High school friends said he was always ready to try new things.
At John Marshall High School in Rochester, Finseth volunteered to dance in an all-male halftime show for a powder puff football game — and dragged his friend David Chiarini with him, Chiarini recalled. Chiarini, who was on the shy side, was initially upset, he said, but Finseth was confident and outgoing and made it fun.
“We had a blast doing it,” Chiarini said, adding that the dance, which featured senior boys and the dance line team acting out goofy scenarios to music, was later revived for a Christmas pep rally.
Matt Arnold, a friend dating back to elementary school, said Finseth had a great sense of humor and humility — and he wasn’t afraid to be vulnerable to put others at ease.