On the afternoon of July 25th, the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) was summoned to a dramatic scene where a woman found herself in dire straits, perched precariously on a hillside off Mulholland Drive. According to the initial LAFD alert, the incident, referred to as INC#1192, involved a female victim who had tumbled roughly 100 feet down the side of a cliff at Stone Canyon Overlook. The Urban Search and Rescue team of LAFD was reported to have descended into action, establishing a rope system to facilitate the safe extraction and subsequent assessment of the patient by the paramedics.
In what must have been a race against time and gravity, the LAFD Air Operations team hovered into the emergency scenario, poised to assist the ground crews, official department updates chronicled the details of the operation and also reveal that an ensemble of firefighters—45 in total—coordinated their expertise to confront the perilous situation, and the patient, having fallen after losing her balance whilst surveying the hill’s edge, was fortuitously delivered from her precarious predicament. It was a complex rescue operation that saw firefighters tactically use a low-angle rope system to ensure the patient’s secure ascent back up to the safety of the road level…