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2 killed in Chicago high-rise fire after saving elderly woman

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — Jameel Johnson didn’t like working in high-rises, his family said, always fearing it would be hard to get out in an emergency.

But when fire struck Tuesday morning inside a 16-story Chicago building where he was installing satellite cable, Johnson, 36, didn’t immediately think about his own escape. Instead, he and another man, John Fasula, 50, rescued an 81-year-old woman from her burning seventh-floor condominium unit.

The two men placed the woman in an elevator and pressed a button to take her down to the lobby. Then they grabbed fire extinguishers from the walls of the smoky hallway and went back to the apartment to try to put out the blaze. Fire officials later found their bodies on the floor outside the woman’s unit.

“He died a hero,” David A. Fields Jr., Johnson’s cousin, said in between sobs. “They died saving a woman’s life.”

On Wednesday, the families of the fire’s two victims gathered separately to remember the ones they lost. Relatives of both men said they weren’t surprised to hear that they risked their lives for someone else.

“That’s how my brother-in-law was,” said Michelle Kozicki, 55, Fasula’s sister-in-law. “There’s never going to be another one like my brother-in-law Johnny. There’s not a bad bone in his body.”

Fasula, of Chicago, was a maintenance manager for the Chicago Transit Authority. At the time of the fire, he was working a side job at the building, his family said. They were not sure of the nature of the job.

Johnson, of Gary, Ind., was working as a private contractor for a cable company at the building, his family said.

It was not clear where the men were when the blaze broke out at about 8:40 a.m. in the elderly woman’s unit, authorities said. They got the panic-stricken woman into an elevator, then returned to her apartment with fire extinguishers, authorities said.

Overcome by smoke, both suffered full cardiac arrest and collapsed, according to officials.

Taken to different hospitals, Johnson and Fasula died later Tuesday morning of the same cause, carbon monoxide intoxication due to smoke inhalation, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

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