An 8-year-old boy with Down syndrome is being hailed as a hero after rescuing his 14-year-old brother from a raging fire that destroyed their Colorado home on Sunday.
Grayson was home with his sister, Eva Grace, when the raging fire broke out around noon, and thick black smoke quickly engulfed the family's home in Centennial.
Although his parents were several miles away, Grayson called for his sister, who was one floor below him, to come out of the burning house. Grayson then fled through a side door and jumped out of a window, prompting her to call police and her mother.
“He was screaming Eva, Eva! And he kept screaming Ava, Ava,” said Renee Unruh, the children's mother. He told KCNC TV.during an emotional interview.
“He saved her life. He's our hero.”
When police arrived, they heard children screaming for help behind a wooden fence in the backyard. According to dramatic body camera footage This was announced by the Arapahoe County Sheriff's Office.
Unable to reach the frightened children, the deputies ran into a neighbor's yard and used their bare hands to punch a hole in the fence, killing the children, both barefoot and wearing shorts and T-shirts, in the piercing snow. I carried it to a safe place inside.
Video footage showed Grayson being carried out of the burning house on South Gibraltar Lane, screaming that the room was on fire. “help me.”
His sister tearfully thanked police officers after the harrowing rescue.
“If there was a hole anywhere in the house, there was smoke coming out of it,” said Deputy Ryan McConnell. he said in a video posted on social media.
“As I went near the house, I heard children screaming. My first thought was that they were still inside. They were obviously scared and worried about what was going on. I had no idea. It felt good to get them out of there, especially knowing they were so young.”
McConnell added that police were thankful no one else was in the home, as scary smoke was pouring out of the door and a vent prevented entry into the interior.
Unruh was visiting her mother, who also suffered a house fire a year ago, when she received a frightening phone call from her daughter and saw smoke rising in the sky.
She and her husband rushed back to their charred home, grateful and relieved to see their children alive.
“I couldn't let them go. I don't want to leave them,” she said, according to KCNC-TV.
“He (Grayson) certainly brightens everyone's day and can obviously save lives.”
After the fire, the Red Cross assisted the family and provided temporary accommodation, and local residents also offered assistance, the paper said.
Officials said smoke could be seen for miles while firefighters worked to extinguish the fire for an hour.
Two officers suffered smoke inhalation injuries and were treated by paramedics at the scene, as were two other children. According to South Metro Fire Rescue.
“One SMFR firefighter was treated at the scene and transported to a local hospital for further evaluation,” the department said in a statement on Facebook.
“Unfortunately, one dog and one cat did not survive the fire and four cats remain missing.”
The cause of the fire is still under investigation.



