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Traffic was moving past the scene.

A vehicle sat on the side of the road, damaged and beginning to burn. Smoke pushed out from the front and started to fill the interior.

Inside the car, the driver was still there.

Bill Frey and Sam Fleming were driving when they saw it.

According to reporting from People, they noticed the vehicle and the condition it was in. The driver was yelling for help. The fire was already spreading.

They pulled over.

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There was no indication that emergency crews had arrived yet. The situation was still in its early stage, which also meant it was unstable.

They moved toward the car.

The doors were not opening.

Fire inside a vehicle does not wait. It progresses through materials, building heat, and reducing the time available to reach anyone inside.

They worked to get in.

Frey and Fleming forced access to the vehicle and reached the driver. The effort required speed and coordination. The driver was not able to exit on his own.

They pulled him out.

They moved him away from the vehicle.

Moments later, the fire intensified.

The car became fully engulfed.

By the time emergency responders arrived, the sequence had already shifted.

The driver was no longer inside.

Traffic continued to move. The road returned to its normal flow.

But for a brief period, two drivers made a different decision.

They stopped.

What They Did And Why It Is Worth Noticing

Bill Frey and Sam Fleming stopped at a crash scene and removed a trapped driver from a burning vehicle before the fire fully spread.

That is what they did.

It is worth noticing because the opportunity to act was limited. Once the fire intensified, access to the interior would have been lost.

They acted within that window.

A car was burning. A driver was inside. Two people stopped and pulled him out.

That changed what happened next.

If you passed a scene where a vehicle was already burning, would you keep moving or pull over and approach it?

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