FDNY honors murdered EMS officer Alison Russo with new medal

A new FDNY medal honoring a murdered EMS officer Alison Russo will be awarded Wednesday to a longtime co-worker who from his post at a 911 dispatch office desperately worked to save her life the Daily News has learned.

EMS Captain Edgar Baez was monitoring his team at the FDNYโ€™s Public Safety Answering Center 2 in the Bronx on the afternoon of Sept. 29 when several 911 calls coming out of Astoria, Queens, flashed on his screen in rapid succession.

One read โ€œCode 34Kโ€ meaning someone had just been stabbed. The next alert almost made his heart stop: โ€œFirefighter stabbed.โ€

Baez immediately had his team alert all available units and superviors, asking them to race to the scene. He also reached out to the FDNYโ€™s Fire Department Operations Center and helped to organize a massive mobile response in a matter of seconds.

It quickly became clear that it wasnโ€™t a firefighter who was stabbed. It was EMS Lt. Alison Russo, the beloved โ€œmother henโ€ of EMS Station 49 who a maniac had knifed more than 20 times in a grisly, unprovoked attack.

โ€œIt came over as a stabbing of a firefighter, maybe an officer, but FDNY officers and EMS officers pretty much wear the same uniform,โ€ Baez recalled. โ€œWhen the first EMS units arrived, they recognized her as the officer from (Station 49). The crew that discovered her… she had issued them their equipment just moments before.โ€

Russo was treated almost immediately, but her wounds were too great. She died at Mount Sinai Medical Center-Queens. At her funeral, she was posthumously promoted to captain.

The rapid response, thanks to Baez and his team, was crucial in getting help for Russo. It also helped first responders lock down the area and capture Peter Zisopoulis, who was charged in Russoโ€™s murder.

Captain Alison Russo North Star Medal

Russo and Baez used to race to emergency calls together from Jacobi Hospital in the Bronx more than two decades ago.

โ€œShe started a year after I did,โ€ Baez recalled. Even as both EMTs became officers, they kept in touch and…

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