One Valentine’s Day afternoon in 2019 in Michigan, Ryan Belcher was driving home from work to pick his up children when he heard a loud crash. Two cars collided, one was a sedan, and the other was a Jeep Cherokee that had flipped over unto its roof. Resisting the temptation to pass by, Belcher pulled over and rushed to the middle of the road to check on the victims. After calling for emergency services, Belcher then heard the cry of a man trapped in his overturned SUV. “He was talking about his legs, how he couldn’t feel his legs,” Belcher told Michigan Live, a local news station. He then hurried over to help a man who was lying halfway out of the driver’s side, his body pinned by a speed limit sign on his torso. The man was 36-year-old Montrell Tinsley.
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Of Athletes and Idiots
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One Valentine’s Day afternoon in 2019 in Michigan, Ryan Belcher was driving home from work to pick his up children when he heard a loud crash. Two cars collided, one was a sedan, and the other was a Jeep Cherokee that had flipped over unto its roof. Resisting the temptation to pass by, Belcher pulled over and rushed to the middle of the road to check on the victims. After calling for emergency services, Belcher then heard the cry of a man trapped in his overturned SUV. “He was talking about his legs, how he couldn’t feel his legs,” Belcher told Michigan Live, a local news station. He then hurried over to help a man who was lying halfway out of the driver’s side, his body pinned by a speed limit sign on his torso. The man was 36-year-old Montrell Tinsley.