Trending Topics

Off-duty N.C. firefighter and wife rescue 2 from burning SUV

A volunteer firefighter and his wife pulled two people from a burning SUV near Cameron, after hearing the crash from their home

By Mark Price
The Charlotte Observer

CAMERON, N.C. — A firefighter and his wife rushed to rescue two people from a burning SUV, after hearing the crash impact from their home, according to investigators in North Carolina.

It happened around 12 a.m. on New Year’s Day near Cameron, and the crash victims were taken by ambulance to a trauma center, the Crains Creek Fire Department said in a Jan. 1 Facebook post. Details of their condition were not released.

“Units were notified that the vehicle was fully engulfed. Upon arrival, a single vehicle accident involving a car versus trees was confirmed, with the vehicle fully involved and a small grass fire also burning,” the fire department reported in a Jan. 1 news release.

“The two occupants were outside the vehicle and lying on the ground. Crews ... quickly brought the fire under control and extinguished it while other members assisted with patient care.”

Photos shared by the department show the vehicle was destroyed in the fire.

An investigation into how the two people got out revealed the impact was loud enough to be heard from a nearby home, and the homeowners rushed to investigate, officials said.

“Dylan Turney and wife Kiersten Turney had removed the victims from the vehicle as the fire began,” the fire department said.

“Mr. Turney is a volunteer with our department and a full-time firefighter with Spout Springs Emergency Services .”

The couple have been lauded as “selfless and heroic” on social media.

“Thanks for being a positive example as first responder heroes 24 hrs a day,” Jack Simpson wrote on the fire department’s Facebook page.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

It happened about a 60-mile drive southwest from downtown Raleigh, at the intersection of Hilmongrove and Cameronhill roads.

Trending
The new Spartan engine features 600 feet of 2½-inch static load housed in a low hosebed
Los Angeles County Fire Department’s team deployed with 71 members, six canine teams and 84,000 pounds of equipment to assist alongside Virginia Task Force 1
The three are in stable condition after an explosion during a house fire on Whidbey Island that destroyed two homes
Charlotte firefighters have relocated from Station 26 while crews tackle an extensive mold problem

©2026 The Charlotte Observer.
Visit charlotteobserver.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Company News
The department’s transition to Pierce custom chassis pumpers reflects a commitment to firefighter safety, operational efficiency and apparatus built specifically for urban fire service demands