Michael O'Leary
Licenced taxi driver Michael O'Leary was making a routine trip to Heathrow Airport
when he spotted a car swerving across the M4 motorway on a deadly collision course
with motorists in the fast lane.
The 67-year-old father-of-six, of Willesden, London, had watched the blue Vauxhall
Cavalier crawl off the hard shoulder at about 10mph and weave across two lanes as
other cars dodged it at high speed.
Pulling alongside, Michael realised that the driver, shopfitter Gordon Richmond,
a 43-year-old father-of-three from Belfast, was slumped unconscious in his seat.
He had suffered a heart attack and his foot had lodged on the accelerator pedal
in an uncontrollable muscular spasm.
Michael realised he had only seconds to avert disaster.
He sped 200 metres ahead, parked on the hard shoulder, got out, and waited for the
out-of-control car to draw level with him.
Then, with astonishing courage, he darted on foot through a gap in the speeding
motorway traffic and began jogging alongside Gordon's vehicle.
With cars hurtling past on either side, Michael wrenched open the front passenger
door and dived inside.
On his knees in the passenger footwell, he grabbed the wheel and steered back into
the middle lane.
Then he dragged on the handbrake to bring the car to a stop in the middle of the
motorway and jumped out to direct passing cars away from the hazard.
A second motorist, Vincent Saunders, an experienced first aider, stopped to help.
Michael acted as a human hazard sign, waving away cars as Vincent administered mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation to Gordon in the front seat.
Two passing ambulances arrived a few minutes later.
Paramedics restarted Gordon's heart and rushed him to an intensive care unit where
staff were able to nurse him back to health.
Later, the ambulancemen praised Michael's "incredible bravery".
The modest cabbie - who quietly left the scene of the drama to watch his beloved
Fulham FC win 2-0 - says he felt he had no choice but to put his life at risk to
save someone else.
"I knew it was very dangerous but I could see the man was helpless and I couldn't
just leave him to die," says Michael.
"I remember thinking that he was somebody's son or somebody's husband and that I
had to help keep him alive."
Gordon's wife Mary says her husband is slowly recovering from his heart attack.
"Michael was incredibly brave and I can never thank him enough," she says.
"Without his actions, there would have been a huge pile-up and my husband, and God
knows how many others. might have lost their lives. He's an amazing, special person."