Who is krystle campbell
BBs, the shrapnel from the bomb, were embedded in her skin, in her clothes. Some of the jurors looked ill.
Others looked mad. Still others were crying. She opened some evidence envelopes. At one point, Tsarnaev appeared to turn to catch a glimpse of all this on the monitor being watched by one of his lawyers, David Bruck. Judy Clarke, another of his lawyers, put her hand on his shoulder and Tsarnaev stopped looking. Hammers explained that Campbell died because blood vessels in her legs were cut and she lost a significant amount of blood.
At this point, Bruck jumped up and asked for a sidebar conference. It was almost like a basketball coach calling a timeout after the other team goes on a run. But after the sidebar, Weinreb posed the question again. I've been a runner my whole life and I really enjoy helping out at the marathon. And this year, especially, it's going to be, I think, very meaningful for everyone. I imagine, though, that there might be some emotional preparation needed, since this time there are more associations with it than just medical work you did last year.
For sure. After the marathon last year, I worked with a counselor, and I think many of us did. And they gave us strategies of how to manage stress, how to manage triggers, that type of thing. Do you still harbor any anger or any other negative feelings about what happened last year? Oh, I am completely angry about what happened last year. This stole the innocence from the event. I've worked in races and have been part of the sport for so long.
You just don't ever expect something like this to happen. What kind of medical help did you end up providing? Certainly far different than you expected when you went to help that day. I, along with other volunteers, medical volunteers, we treated nine, I actually laid hands on nine people. One individual had a large wound in his calf that was bleeding. We stopped the bleeding and he went off to the hospital.
Another man had some burns around his face. And he was sent off. I went back outside, and that's when Krystle Campbell was coming in on the stretcher with the people who moved her in from the street to the tent. And, of course at that point, you didn't know it was Krystle Campbell.
You just knew this was a victim with extreme injuries. Even seeing her come in, were you thinking this is a case that does not look good? Her injuries were extensive. She didn't have a pulse when she got to the tent. And myself and another medical volunteer were doing CPR. And she had a pulse when we were doing CPR, and then we would stop and she wouldn't have a pulse. And the paramedics put a heart monitor on her to look for a heart rhythm.
And she had a heart rhythm but no pulse. And at that point the medical director for Boston EMS who was there had us stop the resuscitation. Story highlights Nurse Stephen Segatore gave bombing victim CPR, but "wounds were too great" Later Segatore realized the woman was Krystle Campbell, one of three fatalities Segatore would like to speak with Campbell's parents about her last moments. The nurse who tended to Boston Marathon bombing victim Krystle Campbell near the finish line during her final moments of life would like to meet her parents in the hopes he could give them some solace in their grief.
Stephen Segatore would like to tell Campbell's parents that she didn't die alone, and she didn't suffer for long. When EMTs carried a woman into the medical tent where Segatore was volunteering, he was struck by her beauty, her youth and her bright blue eye shadow.
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