Sam Orbovich sat in his vehicle, unconscious and trapped, as it burned while sitting along Interstate 94 in St. Paul.
Orbovich, 71, snapped to consciousness as the window on his Honda shattered. An impromptu rescue was underway by a group that included both passersby and a driver from the Minnesota Department of Transportation’s Freeway Incident Response Safety Team — formerly called the Highway Helper. They pulled him to safety.
“I am alive today because several good Samaritans and professional first responders saved my life,” Orbovich said of the Thursday night incident. “It is incredibly heroic when people driving down the highway choose to put themselves at risk by running toward the flames to extract a stranger from a burning car that could explode at any moment.”
Events unfolded about 6:30 p.m. on eastbound I-94 near the Snelling Avenue exit, when Orbovich’s SUV swerved to the right, struck a lamp post and guardrail and burst into flames.
Kadir Tolla stopped and ran to the vehicle. Tolla tried to get Orbovich out but could not get the door open because it was blocked by the guardrail. Just then a MnDOT worker showed up and broke the car window. Together with several others who stopped, they pulled Orbovich out, feet first.
Orbovich suffered minor injuries.
Images of the rescue captured by Tolla’s car video went viral on social media.
“The State Patrol is grateful that the driver is OK due to the heroic actions of the individuals who stopped to help,” Lt. Jill Frankfurth said. “The actions of those who pulled this motorist from the burning car demonstrates the importance and willingness of people throughout Minnesota looking out for each other. We are thankful everyone remained safe.”