Coon Rapids police officer Bryan Platz rattles off a list of reasons that bystanders give for watching a person die of sudden cardiac arrest.
They figured help was on the way. They didn't know what to do. They'd forgotten their training. They were too scared to act.
Platz's mission crystallized when he arrived to find nearly a dozen people gathered around a dying man. Despite recent leaps in lifesaving innovation, including hands-only CPR and the automated external defibrillator (AED), no one helped.
He decided to teach his city how to save lives.
"We see cardiac arrest in its rawest form. The culture has to change," Platz said. "Don't wait for the help. Be the help."
In three years, Platz and the volunteers he's recruited have trained more than 13,000 people in how to perform hands-only CPR and how to use an AED, a portable medical device almost anyone can use to shock a cardiac arrest victim back to life.
They count as least five lives saved as a direct result of their efforts.
"I love how this program cuts through the ignorance. There is no excuse to just stand there," Coon Rapids Mayor Jerry Koch said. "I applaud it. We've met the people whose lives have been saved. That is very powerful testimony."