By Josh Levs, CNN.
(CNN) — Charles Ramsey was eating some dinner Monday night at his home on Cleveland’s West Side when he heard screaming. Soon, he was knocking down a neighbor’s door, freeing three women and a girl who police say were held hostage for years.
Within hours the unassuming man, who works as a dishwasher at a local restaurant, was a national hero, a viral video star and the top topic on Twitter.
“I’m eating my McDonald’s, I come outside, and I see this girl going nuts, trying to get out of the house,” he told CNN affiliate WEWS in an interview watched around the world.
“I got on the porch, and she said, ‘Help me get out. I’ve been here a long time.’ I figured it was a domestic violence dispute. So I open the door. And we can’t get in that way ’cause of how the door is, it’s so much that a body can’t fit through; only your hand.”
Ramsey spoke to FOX 8 in Cleveland about the rescue.
He and a man named Angel Cordero broke down the door, WEWS reported.
“We kicked the bottom. And she comes out with a little girl and she says ‘Call 911. My name is Amanda Berry.'”
He immediately called 911 — and only then realized that Berry was the woman who had been missing for years. “I thought this girl was dead,” he said.
“She’s like, ‘This (expletive) kidnapped me and my daughter,'” he told the 911 operator.
After police arrived, Berry explained there were other women inside. When police came out with them, Ramsey said, “it was astonishing.”
Berry was last seen after finishing her shift at a Burger King in Cleveland in 2003 on the eve of her 17th birthday. The other two women are Georgina “Gina” DeJesus, who disappeared at age 14 in 2004, and Michelle Knight, who vanished in August 2002, at age 21, according to police.
‘I barbecue with this dude’
While Ramsey’s quick action in the largely rundown neighborhood made him a hero, his colorful descriptions helped make him dream fodder for the Twitterverse.
Explaining that he had no idea Ariel Castro, his neighbor, may have had other people inside his home, Ramsey said, “I’ve been here a year. You see where I’m coming from? I barbecue with this dude. We eat ribs and whatnot and listen to salsa music…
“He just comes out to his backyard, plays with the dogs, tinkers with his cars and motorcycles, goes back in the house. So he’s somebody you look, then look away. He’s not doing anything but the average stuff. You see what I’m saying? There’s nothing exciting about him. Well, until today.”
Castro “got some big testicles to pull this off, bro,” Ramsey said. “Because we see this dude every day. I mean every day.”
He added, “I knew something was wrong when a little, pretty white girl ran into a black man’s arms. Something is wrong here. Dead giveaway.”
In one of the top tweets about Ramsey, comedian Patton Oswalt wrote, “Dear Charles Ramsey: I am not a little pretty white girl, but I totally want to run into your black arms. #hero.”
Hodge’s restaurant in Cleveland posted a message on Facebook saying, “we’re extremely proud of our employee Charles Ramsey for not turning his back on the young women. He’s a true Cleveland hero. Our thoughts and prayers will continue to be with the women, their families and their friends.”
Restaurant owner Chris Hodgson told Cleveland.com that the video shows just what kind of person Ramsey is. “What you see in the video is what you get with Chuck,” Hodgson said. “He’s calm in the face of crazy and hectic things going on. He always steps up to do anything you ask … He never says no. He always jumps on it.”
For it’s part, McDonald’s Corp., on its Twitter account Tuesday, said, “Way to go Charles Ramsey– we’ll be in touch.”
Breathless 911 call
Ramsey’s demeanor also comes across clearly in his 911 call, which he began with the fact that he was eating McDonald’s.
“Hey bro,” Ramsey tells the 911 operator. “Check this out. I just came from McDonald’s right? So I’m on my porch eating my little food, right? This broad is trying to break out the f—–g house next door to me, so there’s a bunch of people on the street right now and s–t. So we’re like, ‘What’s wrong, what’s the problem?’ She’s like, ‘This m——–r done kidnapped me and my daughter … She said her name is Linda Berry or some s–t. I don’t know who the f–k that is, I just moved over here, bro. You know what I mean?”
He then answers the 911 operator’s questions about the woman, what she looks like, and what she’s wearing.
Ramsey tells the operator an address which he says corresponds to Berry’s location, not Ramsey’s home address. “I’m smarter than that, bro. I’m telling you where the crime was, not my house,” he says.
“Are the people that she said did this, are they still in the house?” the 911 operator asks.
“I don’t have a f—–g clue, bro. Like I said, I just came from McDonald’s.”
The operator then asks him to check whether Berry needs an ambulance.
“She needs everything. She’s in a panic, bro. She’s been kidnapped, so, you know, put yourself in her shoes.”
“We’ll send the police out,” the operator responds.
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