20 minutes of mouth-to-snout resuscition saves dog after fire

In this March 21 photo, Santa Monica firefighter Andrew Klein holds Nalu, the dog in Santa Monica, California, that he spent minutes giving mouth-to-snout resuscitation to after pulling the pooch from a burning apartment. (Crystal Lamirande via AP)

In this March 21 photo, Santa Monica firefighter Andrew Klein holds Nalu, the dog in Santa Monica, California, that he spent minutes giving mouth-to-snout resuscitation to after pulling the pooch from a burning apartment. (Crystal Lamirande via AP)

Associated Press

SANTA MONICA, Calif. — California firefighters who spent 20 minutes performing mouth-to-snout resuscitation on a dog they rescued from a burning apartment are being hailed as heroes.

The dog’s owner, 35-year-old Crystal Lamirande, had just returned to her Santa Monica apartment Tuesday when a neighbor yelled there was a fire.

Lamirande says she frantically tried to save her dog, a 10-year-old Bichon Frise/Shih Tzu named Nalu. But she says the smoke was too thick.

Moments later as firefighters arrived, she told them about Nalu. They quickly got the fire under control and pulled the lifeless dog from a bedroom.

Firefighter Andrew Klein spent 20 minutes bringing the dog back to life as her tearful owner watched. Lamirande says the pooch spent the next 24 hours in an oxygen chamber and is doing well.

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