An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | Nov. 5, 2015

California National Guard Soldier saves 42 people from burning bus

By Capt. Jason Sweeney California National Guard

LOS ANGELES - Pfc. Jesse Hernandez doesn't think of himself as a hero, but just about everyone else does, especially 42 people who escaped from a burning charter bus after Hernandez forced open the bus's jammed door.

Hernandez's actions resulted in television news reports, a press conference and congratulations from his coworkers at his civilian job and Soldiers in his unit. His heroics spread across social media. He even got a call from "The Ellen DeGeneres Show."

"Everybody was more excited about it than I was," Hernandez said. "I don't see myself any different."

Hernandez, 25, is a rifleman for the California National Guard's D Company (Weapons), 1st Battalion, 160th Infantry Regiment, out of San Pedro. On the civilian side, he works as a custody assistant for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department at the North County Correctional Facility.

On the evening of Oct. 18, Hernandez was driving to work on westbound State Route 60 in Hacienda Heights when traffic began to slow. He saw smoke coming from a charter bus that was blocking the No. 3 and 4 lanes. Fire was coming out of the engine compartment.

As Hernandez drove up, he could see people inside the bus were crowded toward the front, but no one was outside. Some of the passengers were sticking their heads out of the emergency windows to escape the smoke.

"I immediately pulled over," Hernandez said. "I ran up to the bus and saw the bus driver inside kicking the door and trying to open it."

Hernandez tried to open the door from the outside but it was jammed. He felt around the door and found a handle, pushed it open and told everyone to exit. By this time, smoke was pouring out of the bus.

Forty-two passengers, including several children, came out the door, many of them thanking Hernandez for what he had done.

When the last person exited, Hernandez went inside and checked for stragglers. The engine compartment at the rear of the bus was engulfed in flames and the bus was entirely filled with smoke.

Hernandez found no one else inside. When he exited, firefighters and deputies had arrived on the scene. Hernandez told them what had happened and then got in his car and drove to work.

When he arrived at the correctional facility, his lieutenant called him over. The lieutenant and everyone there had already heard what had happened. The news had spread through the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department.

Television news stations picked up on the rescue and it blew up on social media. Even the inmates at the correctional facility saw the reports on television.

Two days later, Hernandez was at home sleeping after working a 16-hour shift. He was awakened by a phone call telling him to head over to the Los Angeles Hall of Justice to represent the department at a press conference.

"They're proud of me for what I did," Hernandez said of the department, adding that his family and girlfriend told him they are proud of him, too.

But for Hernandez, what he did just came naturally. "I guess with all my training with the department and with the Army, it seemed like a normal thing to do."

"I was happy that one of our guys was at the right place at the right time to help others," 1st Sgt. Matthew Sprenger said. "When we get good news it's a good thing. He did really well and we're proud of him."

Hernandez said he had wanted to join the Army out of high school but went to college instead. After landing the position with the sheriff's department, he still wanted to be in the Army so he enlisted in the Guard in 2014.

His goal in the military is to move up the ranks and gain experience and knowledge. On the civilian side, his goal is to become a deputy sheriff.

"My thing is to learn everything there is to learn," he said.

 

 

Related Articles
U.S. Army Corporal Larry Matinsk puts cigarettes into the extended hands of newly liberated prisoners behind a stockade in the Allach concentration camp, near Dachau Germany on April 30, 1945. Also pictured are U.S. Army Soldiers Arthur Toratti and George Babel (second and third from the left). Allach was a subcamp of the Dachau concentration camp. American Soldiers of the U.S. 7th Army, including members of the 42nd Infantry and 45th Infantry and 20th Armored Divisions participated in the subcamp’s liberation. The main concentration camp at Dachau had more than 120 subcamps in the area.
N.Y. National Guard Commander to Attend Dachau Liberation 80th Anniversary
By Richard Goldenberg, | April 28, 2025
TROY, N.Y. – The commander of the New York Army National Guard’s Troy-based 42nd Infantry Division will attend the April 29 event commemorating the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp.The 42nd...

The Republic of Zambia's Brig. Gen. Choonga Mutandalike speaks to senior leaders from the North Carolina National Guard, representatives from the Republics of Moldova, Botswana, Malawi, and Zambia at a hurricane response symposium in Raleigh, N.C. April 22, 2025. The symposium was part of a six-day event hosted by the National Guard’s State Partnership program, reviewing and sharing lessons learned from Hurricane Helene.
North Carolina Guard Welcomes SPP Partners to Hurricane Response Exercise
By Lt. Col. Ellis Parks, | April 25, 2025
RALEIGH, N.C. – Senior leaders from the North Carolina National Guard are hosting representatives from Moldova, Botswana, Malawi and Zambia this week for a hurricane response exercise. The six-day event, from April 21-26 in...

A HH-60M Black Hawk, assigned to Wyoming Army Aviation Support Facility, releases water during an interagency bucket drop training at Camp Guernsey, Wyoming, on April 16, 2025. The training brought together Wyoming Aviation crews and partners including Wyoming State Forestry, Camp Guernsey Fire Department, Cheyenne Fire Rescue’s Wildland Team, Glendo Volunteer Fire & Rescue, Albany County Volunteer Fire Department, Yoder Volunteer Fire Department, Guernsey Rural Fire District, and the Platte County Fire Warden. The exercise was designed to sharpen skills like water bucket deployment, aerial coordination, and ground-to-air communications.
Wyoming Guard Aviators Sharpen Wildfire Response Skills in Training
By Staff Sgt. Cesar Rivas, | April 25, 2025
CAMP GUERNSEY, Wyo. – Wyoming Army National Guard aviators, in coordination with local and state firefighting agencies, conducted annual interagency bucket drop training April 16 at Camp Guernsey Joint Training Center,...