Blind Man, Guide Dog Safe After Subway Fall

NEW YORK (AP) —
Cecil Williams pets his guide dog Orlando in his hospital bed, following a fall onto New York subway tracks Tuesday. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
Cecil Williams pets his guide dog Orlando in his hospital bed, following a fall onto New York subway tracks Tuesday. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Gallant guide dog Orlando was just doing his duty. The black Lab bravely leapt onto the tracks at a Manhattan subway platform Tuesday after his blind owner lost consciousness and tumbled in front of an oncoming train.

Cecil Williams, 61, and Orlando both escaped serious injury when the train passed over top of them — a miraculous end to a harrowing ordeal that began when Williams began to feel faint on his way to the dentist.

“He tried to hold me up,” an emotional Williams said from his hospital bed, his voice breaking at times.

Witnesses said Orlando began barking frantically and tried to stop Williams from falling from the platform. Matthew Martin told the New York Post that Orlando jumped down and tried to rouse Williams even as a train approached.

“He was [licking] him, trying to get him to move,” Martin said.

Witnesses called for help and the train’s motorman slowed his approach as Williams and Orlando lay in the trench between the rails.

As Williams regained consciousness, emergency workers put him on a stretcher and pulled him from the subway, making sure Orlando was not injured.

“I’m feeling amazed,” Williams said. “I feel that G-d … [has] something in store for me. They didn’t take me away this time. I’m here for a reason.”

Williams was taken to a hospital where he is expected to recover, with Orlando at his bedside. Williams, a large bandage on his head, said he is not sure why he lost consciousness, but he is on insulin and other medications.

Orlando will be rewarded with some kind of special treat, Williams said, along with plenty of affection and scratches behind the ears.

“[He] gets me around and saves my life on a daily basis,” he said.

Williams, of Brooklyn, has been blind since 1995, and Orlando is his second dog. The lab will be 11 on Jan. 5, and will be retiring soon, Williams said. His medical benefits will cover a new guide dog but won’t pay for a non-working dog, so he’ll be looking for a good home for Orlando.

If he had the money, Williams said, “I would definitely keep him.”

If that’s not possible, the family that raised Orlando as a puppy says it will be “absolutely thrilled to have him back,” said Guiding Eyes for the Blind spokeswoman Michelle Brier. “They’re very thrilled their little baby has made such a big difference.”

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