Skip to article

Mother and children saved from burning Dunedin house

Published: May 8, 2005

An off-duty constable saved the lives of a mother and two children after he broke into their burning Dunedin home and dragged them, unconscious, to safety on Saturday morning.

The blaze left a 22-year-old woman fighting for her life in Dunedin Hospital’s intensive care unit and her two children, aged five and three, recovering in hospital.

Their conditions had all improved last night.

The children were discharged and their mother, Mary-Jane McKinlay was moved from intensive care into a general ward.

Off-duty constable Craig Bennett, 30, was driving past the Mornington suburb house when he saw windows exploding and fireballs shooting into the air.

The fire is thought to have started from an electrical fault at 7.30am.

“I didn’t think about anything, really. I went into policeman mode and just concentrated on getting the people out,” Mr Bennett said.

Neighbours showed Mr Bennett where one of the bedrooms was and he smashed a window and climbed in.

“The smoke was at ground level and I went down on my knees, but it didn’t make a difference.

“I had to walk around with my eyes closed because they were just streaming.”

Feeling around the room, he found a five-year-old boy unconscious on a bed and handed him out the window to a waiting neighbour.

He then heard a moan and eventually found the three-year-old girl hiding behind the bed. She, too, was unconscious and was passed out the window to neighbours.

Thick smoke made it impossible for Mr Bennett to go further so he climbed out and was directed to another window where it was thought the children’s mother might be.

He smashed his way into the room and found the young woman lying on the floor.

But after reaching her, the smoke got too much and he was forced to leave.

“I was starting to feel really giddy and I knew I couldn’t get her out in time.”

The part-time log fire installer ran to his truck, grabbed a dust mask and headed back to the room as firefighters arrived.

He and a fireman went back to the bedroom and dragged out the critically ill woman.

“I know this is the old cliche, but I really was just doing my job.

“I didn’t do anything that any other cop wouldn’t have done,” Mr Bennett said.

He had high praise for the neighbours who helped.

“I couldn’t have done it without them. Not only would I have not known where to start, what would I have done with the kids when I had them?”

Mr Bennett was treated at the scene for a number of cuts to his hands and arms, and two other neighbours also suffered minor cuts.

Ms McKinlay was renting the house and had lived there for about a year.

Detective Sergeant Brett Roberts said the fire was not being treated as suspicious.

It started in the lounge, which was extensively damaged, as was the adjoining kitchen.

The rest of the house was severely damaged by smoke.

“Craig did a brilliant job. If it hadn’t been for him and the neighbours we probably would have been looking at three deaths,” Mr Roberts said.

If you enjoyed this good news Subscribe to Good News Blog


Share this

To share this simply copy and paste one of the below URL's:




Published in Rescues
Attribution: www.stuff.co.nz