FARMINGTON — A Davis High
School graduate who survived the Aurora, Colo., theater shooting is
mourning the loss of her boyfriend, John Blunk, and praising him as a
hero.
Jansen Young, a Farmington
native who had recently moved to Colorado, was with Blunk at the theater
early Friday when police say James Holmes went on a shooting rampage
that left 12 people dead and 58 wounded.
In an interview with NBC's
"Dateline" televised Sunday, Young recounted how Blunk immediately
recognized the danger of the situation and pushed her to the floor.
"I thought a kid had come in and thrown a firework," she said.
Young said she was still asking Blunk why he was telling her to get down after he had pushed her to the floor.
"He whispered in my ear," she
recalled. "He was like, 'Someone's got a gun, and they're shooting
people.' I started thinking, 'This is it. I'm going to die right here.'"
Blunk was shot during the melee and later died.
"I turned to John, and I was,
like, shaking him and trying to get him up," Young said. "He wouldn't
get up. I kind of pushed his arm up, his shoulder up. I'm like, 'John,
come on.' And he wasn't moving."
Blunk was a military veteran
who served on the U.S.S. Nimitz. He was separated from his wife,
Chantel, with whom he had two children.
"Dateline" reported that
Chantel Blunk was "unhappy that (Young) left (Blunk) that night not
knowing for certain if he was dead." But Young "knew in her heart he was
gone."
"I can't even imagine my life
without him," Young said. "How can you share this with somebody and then
not have him around anymore?"
Saturday, Young was
interviewed by NBC's "Today," explaining to Savannah Guthrie how Blunk
shielded her body with his and saved her life.
"I was like, 'Oh my gosh. I think John just took a bullet for me … and I was thinking about what a great hero he is," she said.
Young told "Today" that Blunk was a hero throughout his life.
"He's been a hero forever,
well before I even met him," she said. "One thing he said … to me was,
'Jansen, I was born to serve my country.'"
Young said Blunk would have taken a bullet for anyone in the theater that night.
"You know, the nearest person
sitting next to him, he would have been like, 'This person needs my help
now,'" she said. "That just who he was … and everybody knew it. He went
above and beyond to help everyone. … He was an incredible person."
source: desert news
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