03/16/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 03/16/2026 09:45
VICENZA, Italy - When Maj. Brian Bailey pulled into an Austrian rest stop, plumes of black smoke billowed from a tractor-trailer cab engulfed by flames.
Nearby were two people on the ground, dangerously close to the fire. Adrenaline raced through Bailey's body as he ran toward the blaze. A woman screamed "Help my husband!"
Bailey, a chaplain at U.S. Army Garrison Italy, was returning to Vicenza from a course in Grafenwöhr, Germany, on March 8 when he pulled into to rest area in Angath, about 40 miles northeast of Innsbruck.
One victim, the truck's driver, was severely burned and unresponsive. The second man, a Lithuanian passerby, had pulled the driver out but fell five feet during the rescue, shattering his leg. His wife had been calling for help.
Bailey, a Tennessee native and Iraq veteran, had been in tense situations before. Soldier training, to include the Combat Lifesaver Course and Combat Medical Ministry training kicked in.
"Those courses prepared me to be a first responder for physical and spiritual injuries and when faced with the reality of the situation," Bailey said. "The skills I had been taught allowed me to act."
The trucker, a man from Uzbekistan, was severely burned and bloodied. Bailey and another bystander - a Polish man named Bongo - carefully moved the trucker away from the flames. They gently placed him beside the Lithuanian - Bailey called him Otto - who was on a trip with his wife and nephew.
Bailey helped cut away the trucker's burned clothes and assessed his injuries. He had shallow breathing and a fast, weak pulse. He and Bongo prepared to conduct CPR, clearing his airway, tilting his head back and elevating his feet. Worried that his heart may stop, Bailey ran into the rest stop and, using his high school-level German, convinced staff to get an automated external defibrillator.
Back outside, they continued to monitor the victims' vital signs. Bailey told other people to call for help and spoke to the emergency dispatcher through a bystander's phone, sharing information while continuing to provide care.
Otto, the Lithuanian, was in extreme pain. They didn't want to move him any further so they did their best to shield him from the heat of the flames, growing higher as the fire consumed the whole front of the truck nearby.
Several loud explosions erupted from the burning cab. Other truckers, using handheld extinguishers, attempted to put the fire out, but their efforts were in vain.
The first Austrian paramedics to arrive didn't have gear to move the injured. Then Austrian police and ambulances arrived. Bailey helped them move the injured to a safer spot for further care.
"We first placed the burn victim on a litter and moved him to a grassy area away from the fire," Bailey said. "We then returned for the second man with the broken leg, and I assisted a paramedic in stabilizing his leg with an air splint."
As the medics worked, Bailey spoke to Otto, offering encouragement. Bailey helped lift Otto into an ambulance, that transported him to the nearby Kufstein District Hospital, according to Austrian news outlets. The driver was airlifted by helicopter to the Murnau am Staffelsee Hospital in Bavaria with severe burns.
During the Initial investigations, police said a technical defect in the driver's cab caused the fire, according to Austrian news reports.
Reflecting afterward, Bailey thought of his training as an Army chaplain and passages from the Bible - things that helped him process the stressful event. Bailey's religious beliefs have been at the forefront of his mind since the incident. He believes that his involvement was not by chance. He speaks humbly of the steps he took that afternoon, from the first aid to the comforting words of encouragement that he offered.
"My deepest wish was for my actions to point not to myself, but to the profound hope and compassion that Jesus speaks of," Bailey said. "I am humbled to have been a small part of the care for the wounded, and I pray that my service brought a glimmer of that divine hope to a very dark situation."