The brave cop seen in a video calming survivors of the San Bernardino, California, mass shooting — promising them “I’ll take a bullet before you do, that’s for damn sure” — came forward Tuesday to insist that he was no hero because any other cop would have done the same thing.
San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Detective Jorge Lozano was just one of more than 300 local, county and state officers who responded to the Inland Resource Center, the state-run facility for people with developmental disabilities where Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik killed 14 during a holiday lunch last week.
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About two dozen of those first responders, all wearing black ribbons, appeared Tuesday at a news conference at San Bernardino police headquarters to talk about their experiences nearly a week after the massacre.
But it was the words of Lozano — recorded on a cellphone by one of the people he led to safety — that captured in the minds of many the heroism of the law enforcement officers who risked their lives that day to save those of others.
Lt. Madden said he was in fear as he looked through building because he wasn't sure if suspects were still inside. pic.twitter.com/1YlhRXeGiq
— Alex Groves (@AlexDGroves) December 9, 2015
“I said what I said, and I meant what I said,” Lozano said Tuesday. “I meant it to calm them down and relax them.”
It apparently worked, he said — “it calmed them a little bit.”
Lozano’s moment of truth came as he was shepherding several survivors toward an elevator. One of them was a woman with a small child, “maybe an 8-year-old boy, terrified, shaking like a leaf.”
“It’s nothing short of what any other person in law enforcement would do,” Lozano maintained. “It’s our job to put ourselves in danger to protect people.”
And the first teams on the scene definitely knew they were in danger.
“I was thinking a lot of things actually approaching the building,” San Bernardino Police Detective Brian Lewis said. “We knew that we were probably outgunned. We knew there were people down and we needed to get someone to them.”
“I would be lying if i said it wasn’t difficult walking up to those doors,” with alarms blaring, sprinklers activated and a pall of gunpowder “prevalent in the room,” Lewis said.
“You know, we didn’t have any cover,” he said. “We didn’t know where in the building the gunmen were. We didn’t know how many people were down, but we knew we needed to get into the building and save them.”
‘Today is about the victims’









