“I would say there was not a dry eye in the house,” he said. “I’ve never seen as many firefighters as emotional as this. He was almost bigger than life. He just moved a lot of people.”
Commissioner Jones said Sergeant Johnson “was a well-rounded, caring and intelligent man” who lived life “with no limits,” running marathons and skydiving.
“He was just a magnificent man, soft-spoken, caring, truly a great human being,” Commissioner Jones said.
Sergeant Johnson’s brother Jamal called him his “idol” at a news conference on Saturday, according to local news reports. “He was always a hero to me,” Jamal Johnson said.
A GoFundMe campaign was started to support Sergeant Johnson’s family, including an older daughter, Kendell, 17.
In his 2018 “Moth Radio Hour” monologue, titled “To Bravely Do or Bravely Die,” he described a harrowing effort, about a decade earlier, to rescue a woman from a house fire. He pulled her from the burning structure only to learn hours later that she hadn’t made it. She had inhaled too much smoke, he said.
“It’s never easy and it never feels right to lose a human life when you’ve been called to rescue them, but it comes with the job,” he said. “Things like that and other things that I learn from those that came before me, I try to pass on to the younger firefighters on the job. I’m a sergeant now, and that’s the family thing that we do.