Home
       
                       .-') _      .-') _  
                      ( OO ) )    ( OO ) ) 
          .-----. ,--./ ,--,' ,--./ ,--,'
         '  .--./ |   \ |  |\ |   \ |  |\  
         |  |('-. |    \|  | )|    \|  | ) 
        /_) |OO  )|  .     |/ |  .     |/  
        ||  |`-'| |  |\    |  |  |\    |   
       (_'  '--'\ |  | \   |  |  | \   |
          `-----' `--'  `--'  `--'  `--'
       lite.cnn.com - on gopher - inofficial
       
       
       ARTICLE VIEW: 
       
       ‘She saved our lives’: How a panicked driver spared a family from
       deadly Florida tornado spawned by Milton
       
       By Emma Tucker and Taylor Romine, CNN
       
       Updated: 
       
       7:21 PM EDT, Wed October 16, 2024
       
       Source: CNN
       
       As airborne debris was being sucked into a tornado forming before
       Michelle Westfield’s eyes, it became clear there would be no escape
       if she drove her car forward on a road in St. Lucie County, Florida,
       last Wednesday. It would be a death sentence.
       
       She slammed on the brakes, put her car in reverse and bolted backward
       as far as she could go – the entire time screaming and pounding on
       the horn on Winter Garden Parkway, a residential road in Lakewood Park.
       
       At that moment, a couple outside taking videos of water pooling on the
       road heard Westfield’s screams.
       
       “She is screaming, ‘Get inside!’ and we are tripping over each
       other trying to get in the house,” Brandi Clarke told CNN.
       
       After hearing Westfield’s warning, Clarke ran inside and grabbed
       their family to shelter in a hallway of the house. As soon as her
       husband shut the door, their entire house shook with the force of the
       tornado, she said.
       
       “Everything felt like slow motion,” she said.
       
       The dramatic story comes about a week after Hurricane Milton and
       brought a flurry of tornadoes to the state’s east coast. The tornado
       in the Spanish Lakes community of St. Lucie County killed at least six
       people.
       
       Westfield had been driving to her home in the Spanish Lakes community
       when she encountered a tornado that would end up ripping through homes
       on the road, where she had to reverse her car.
       
       The carport and shed roof of her house was damaged, but the rest of her
       house were left intact. She said she’s just grateful to be alive.
       
       After the incident, Clarke was so touched by Westfield’s warning that
       she posted about it on her Facebook in an attempt to find the
       “hero” who gave them the warning.
       
       “She definitely saved our lives,” Clarke told CNN, adding that
       other neighbors heard her as well and got in their homes. “She
       deserves a hero award.”
       
       “No matter how much she won’t accept it, you really did,” she
       told , which was there when Clarke and Westfield met for the first
       time.
       
       “I keep telling people I did not do anything heroic. I panicked, but
       my panic alerted people to go inside, and that’s a blessing,”
       Westfield told CNN.
       
       A fateful encounter
       
       Before the traumatic experience, the 55-year-old Westfield had been
       sheltering at work for almost three hours with her daughter and
       grandchildren as her phone was exploding with tornado warnings every
       few minutes, she said.
       
       When she slammed on the brakes, a truck driver behind her started
       honking the horn, wanting to get past her.
       
       “I started beeping my horn, like, ‘don’t go, don’t go!’”
       Westfield said. “He went around me, I put the car in reverse, and I
       just flew backwards as fast as I could, screaming, and just kept going
       until I saw it (the tornado) was kind of going off to the left.”
       
       When it seemed safe, Westfield drove her daughter and grandchildren to
       their home, which is down the street from where she would later
       encounter the tornado forming on Winter Garden Parkway. She then
       started her trip home to Spanish Lakes, about three miles away, but
       only made it about a mile until she saw debris flying in the air.
       
       Westfield floored the car backward until she reached the end of the
       road, desperately trying to get home to her husband, with whom she
       stayed on the phone during the chaotic car ride. She quickly realized
       she couldn’t take the turn she needed to get home.
       
       “I looked and the gas pumps and the roof were gone at the gas
       station. I looked left, and two 18-wheelers had blown out of the Dollar
       General parking lot,” Westfield said. Still on the line with her
       husband, she yelled at him to take cover and get down on the floor as
       he heard the tornado heading his way.
       
       “He heard me going through it, and I told him I’m safe, I got
       through it, and then it came straight into our community,” she said.
       
       Westfield was still in a panic, desperately worried about her family,
       when she decided to take shelter at a nearby pizzeria called Nino’s,
       she said. The owner and his son then offered to rescue her husband from
       their home and went to check on her daughter and grandchildren, she
       continued.
       
       In her Facebook post, attempting to find Westfield, Clarke said, “I
       swear I heard you scream get inside.”
       
       “Within seconds of running into our home and grabbing our children
       off the couch, our house started shaking, my ears started popping, the
       dogs started howling and whining,” Clarke wrote. “For 15 seconds,
       my world froze as I heard the loudest rumbling noise go across the
       house.”
       
       Before last week, Westfield didn’t know Clarke and her husband. But
       now, they all feel like they’ve gotten new family members.
       
       After seeing Clarke’s Facebook post, the two met in person – and
       their bond was already palpable. Westfield and Clarke intend on staying
       friends, already making plans to barbecue in the driveway where the
       fateful encounter occurred.
       
       “I’m a woman who panicked and fight or flight kicked in,”
       Westfield said. “I could have been home at that time … So
       obviously, I was supposed to drive by their house at that time and
       alert them to get inside to their kids.”
       
   DIR  <- back to index