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WATCH: Utah officers push unconscious teen driver to safety in ‘miracle’ rescue

TAYLORSVILLE, Utah (KTVX) — A Taylorsville, Utah family is praising two police officer’s heroic efforts for saving their 17-year-old daughter’s life.

The morning of Dec. 9, started as usual for Taylorsville High School senior Sarah Canepari. She got in her car to head to school, but doesn’t remember anything after that.


Sarah was driving when she suddenly started experiencing a seizure, which caused her to become unconscious and slump over the steering wheel and drift into oncoming traffic.

Fortunately for her, Unified Police Officer Jesse Allen and off-duty Murray Police Sergeant Jason Coons happened to be at that same intersection.

Sgt. Coons’ dashboard camera was recording.

“I pulled my car up next to theirs to kind of bump into it to attempt to get it to stop or at least slow down,” Sgt. Coons explained. “Unfortunately, that didn’t work. It was unsuccessful.”

Allen then pulled up in front of the car to kind of do the same thing, “We were able to get it stopped up on a grass berm on a sidewalk and run-up to the car and were able to see that there was a young female driver that appeared to be having a seizure.”

Allen and Coons broke a window to get into the locked car and give Sarah first aid until paramedics arrived.

“I feel very lucky and blessed that they were there to save me,” Sarah said. “I don’t know if I would have been in the condition that I’m in if they hadn’t saved me.”

Her mother, Kelli Canepari, choked back tears when talking about the two officers.

“The hardest thing was not being able to give them a huge hug and tell them ‘Thank you so much’ for what they did for my daughter. What a blessing it was. Really a miracle,” Kelli said. “What a miracle it was that Officer Allen was in the right place at the right time. It’s still amazing to me that he was able to see into her car and to immediately recognize that she was having a seizure and then jump right into action and knew exactly what to do.”

“So much of this profession is just that, being in the right place at the right time,” Sgt. Coons said. “So I was happy to be there in that position to be able to help her as best we could.”

Thanks to their quick bumper-cars intervention, Sarah turned out to be O.K.

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“I’d like to say ‘Thank you’ for what they did for me,” Sarah said. “Thank them for being able to be aware and doing their job very well to be able to see me in the car especially in that situation…I really appreciate them and would like to thank them for I guess saving my life.”

Sgt. Coons says incidents like this are why people go into law enforcement.

“Any officer put in that position I’m confident would have done the same thing to help that young lady,” Sgt. Coons said. “We were lucky to be there and stop anything, potential dangers that could have happened.”

Sarah and her parents say she has not had any seizures since that morning. She says that after graduation in May, she plans to continue her education as an art major at Brigham Young University-Idaho where she wants to learn how to animate children’s movies and TV shows. If she ever needs superhero characters, she’s got two of them for inspiration.