doseiai
13-09-07, 01:55 PM
FORT LAUDERDALE - As the lunch rush started Monday, waiter Juan Canales stopped a carjacker from taking a woman's Honda CRV out of the parking lot where he worked.
Hours later he lost his job.
At about 11:30 a.m. Monday, Massiel Marquardt, 22, walked out of a Subway restaurant at the Southland Shopping Center in the 900 block of State Road 84. A man approached her from behind and pointed a 4-inch pocketknife at her left side, she said.
Related links
Straight from the source: Good Samaritan fights off would-be carjacker Video
Fired for good deed Photo
"He said, 'Give me your car keys or you're gonna die,'" said Marquardt, who moved to South Florida from Georgia two weeks ago. "Honestly, I don't know where he came from."
Marquardt said she handed over the keys to her 2007 Honda and ran back toward the shops, screaming, "Help me!"
Canales, 42, who was opening up 84 Thai Food for the lunch crowd, sprang into action. He said he caught up to the suspect, Albert Means, 46, and told him, "You're not leaving with this truck."
Canales said the suspect pulled out the knife to stab him but Canales grabbed a two-by-four piece of woodfrom a nearby truck. Canales said he swung at Means and threatened to hit him with the wood if he tried to get into Marquardt's Honda.
The man lowered his knife, and Canales brought him to the ground. Three other men in the crowd that had formed rushed forward to hold Means down until police arrived.
"It was a man's instinct," said Canales, a married father of three who has six sisters. "That's all it was. I saw a woman in distress."
Police said they arrested Means on aggravated assault and armed robbery charges. He had two arrest warrants out, one for drug paraphernalia possession and another for probation violation, Detective Kathy Collins said. He is being held in the Broward County Jail.
Canales, who worked at 84 Thai Food for three weeks, returned to work after spending an hour talking to police and the media. Once the lunch shift ended, his boss fired him.
"The owner got belligerent" about all the attention his scuffle with the carjacker generated, Canales said.
The owner, listed in corporate records as Sathaporn Yosagraiof Fort Lauderdale, could not be reached for comment despite two calls to the restaurant and one to his home.
A former electrician, Canales was convicted of robbery in 2004 and attempted cocaine possession in 2006, Florida criminal records show. He served prison time and has been working to stay on a straight path ever since.
"I was a bad person once upon a time and I decided to change my life," Canales said. "That doesn't have anything to do with what I did."
When he was fired another instinct kicked in, as Canales tried to figure out how to support his wife, Jennifer, and sons Eddy, 2, Jason, 8, and Miguel, 16.
"Like any other father on this planet and in this world, I gotta take my butt out here and get another job," he said.
Staff Researcher Barbara Hijek contributed to this report.
Macollvie Jean-François can be reached at mjfrancois@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7922
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/sfl-flbgoodsamaritan0911nbsep11,0,1176566.story
Why am I not surprised it was an asian owner who fired the guy? Instead of commending him as western culture would do, they FIRE HIM!!!??? There are only two LAME reasons why I could think of that she/he would fire him.
1. Fear of retaliation at the store, but yet, the jacker is in bars.
2. He/She was trying to cover up something, like cheating on taxes, not meeting health standards, etc.
Either way, the owner should have some sense to commend this person and rise above their own fear, instead of the typical asian reaction of "attacking the victim for being a victim". In this case he wasnt the victim, but nonetheless it could have been him, he still would have been fired i'm sure.
Hours later he lost his job.
At about 11:30 a.m. Monday, Massiel Marquardt, 22, walked out of a Subway restaurant at the Southland Shopping Center in the 900 block of State Road 84. A man approached her from behind and pointed a 4-inch pocketknife at her left side, she said.
Related links
Straight from the source: Good Samaritan fights off would-be carjacker Video
Fired for good deed Photo
"He said, 'Give me your car keys or you're gonna die,'" said Marquardt, who moved to South Florida from Georgia two weeks ago. "Honestly, I don't know where he came from."
Marquardt said she handed over the keys to her 2007 Honda and ran back toward the shops, screaming, "Help me!"
Canales, 42, who was opening up 84 Thai Food for the lunch crowd, sprang into action. He said he caught up to the suspect, Albert Means, 46, and told him, "You're not leaving with this truck."
Canales said the suspect pulled out the knife to stab him but Canales grabbed a two-by-four piece of woodfrom a nearby truck. Canales said he swung at Means and threatened to hit him with the wood if he tried to get into Marquardt's Honda.
The man lowered his knife, and Canales brought him to the ground. Three other men in the crowd that had formed rushed forward to hold Means down until police arrived.
"It was a man's instinct," said Canales, a married father of three who has six sisters. "That's all it was. I saw a woman in distress."
Police said they arrested Means on aggravated assault and armed robbery charges. He had two arrest warrants out, one for drug paraphernalia possession and another for probation violation, Detective Kathy Collins said. He is being held in the Broward County Jail.
Canales, who worked at 84 Thai Food for three weeks, returned to work after spending an hour talking to police and the media. Once the lunch shift ended, his boss fired him.
"The owner got belligerent" about all the attention his scuffle with the carjacker generated, Canales said.
The owner, listed in corporate records as Sathaporn Yosagraiof Fort Lauderdale, could not be reached for comment despite two calls to the restaurant and one to his home.
A former electrician, Canales was convicted of robbery in 2004 and attempted cocaine possession in 2006, Florida criminal records show. He served prison time and has been working to stay on a straight path ever since.
"I was a bad person once upon a time and I decided to change my life," Canales said. "That doesn't have anything to do with what I did."
When he was fired another instinct kicked in, as Canales tried to figure out how to support his wife, Jennifer, and sons Eddy, 2, Jason, 8, and Miguel, 16.
"Like any other father on this planet and in this world, I gotta take my butt out here and get another job," he said.
Staff Researcher Barbara Hijek contributed to this report.
Macollvie Jean-François can be reached at mjfrancois@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7922
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/broward/sfl-flbgoodsamaritan0911nbsep11,0,1176566.story
Why am I not surprised it was an asian owner who fired the guy? Instead of commending him as western culture would do, they FIRE HIM!!!??? There are only two LAME reasons why I could think of that she/he would fire him.
1. Fear of retaliation at the store, but yet, the jacker is in bars.
2. He/She was trying to cover up something, like cheating on taxes, not meeting health standards, etc.
Either way, the owner should have some sense to commend this person and rise above their own fear, instead of the typical asian reaction of "attacking the victim for being a victim". In this case he wasnt the victim, but nonetheless it could have been him, he still would have been fired i'm sure.