Residents wake up screaming as cops race to rescue them from late-night apartment blaze: video

Residents at a Utah apartment complex awoke in horror in the early morning hours of June 7 as officers from the St. George Police Department told them their homes were on fire, bodycam footage obtained by Fox News Digital shows.Video shows a cop busting down the apartment door of a sleeping family, urgently alerting them, “Hey, you guys, your unit’s on fire, you need to get out!””Wait, what?” the residents can be heard responding.Another clip shows an officer physically guiding a shirtless resident through his living room into the orange-tinged open air, yelling, “Run, run!”FIREFIGHTER PULLS TODDLER FROM BURNING APARTMENT BUILDING IN DRAMATIC EARLY MORNING RESCUE: VIDEO”Hey, everybody out!” an officer shouted in the bodycam footage.Officers communicated over radio about a man stuck in a second-floor apartment that was on fire. Footage shows the officers using a ladder to escort the resident to safety.”There’s one more guy up there!” an officer yelled.NEW JERSEY CHILD JUMPS FROM SECOND FLOOR OF BURNING HOME INTO OFFICER’S ARMSOne sleeping resident did not respond to an officer’s warning.”Hey, building’s on fire. You gotta get out!” an officer yelled while shining a flashlight on the slumbering citizen’s face. Video then showed the resident waking up screaming as a loud bang occurred.”You gotta go! Let’s go, let’s go!” the officer yelled as he yanked the resident out of bed.Further video shows officers calmly evacuating two small children as the kids’ family comforts them.”Come here, buddy. I’m gonna lift you over the wall, it’s all right, OK?” an officer said.BODYCAM FOOTAGE CAPTURES TENNESSEE POLICE OFFICER SAVING MOTHER AND TWO KIDS FROM BURNING TWO-STORY HOMEA large explosion can be heard toward the end of the video as a mother pushes a baby in a stroller. One officer at the end of the video said a roof collapsed on top of him.Eight officers who responded to the incident were sent to a hospital and treated for smoke inhalation, but all have since been released, according to the St. George Police Department.The fire began in one unit and spread through a shared attic, eventually burning down or damaging 20 units, according to FOX 13 Salt Lake City.Fox News Digital contacted the St. George Police Department for further information.