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Pittsburgh Penguins president helps save cameraman attacked during violent protest
Pittsburgh Penguins President David Morehouse (Gregory Shamus/NHLI via Getty Images)

Pittsburgh Penguins president helps save cameraman attacked during violent protest

David Morehouse is being hailed as a hero

David Morehouse, the president and CEO of the Pittsburgh Penguins hockey team, is being hailed a hero after being credited with stepping in to help save a local news cameraman after the victim was attacked during a George Floyd protest that turned violent.

What are the details?

KDKA-AM cameraman Ian Smith was beaten and thrown to the ground and his camera destroyed Saturday night while he was covering a demonstration outside the Penguins' PPG Paints Arena. He was pulled to safety, but didn't know who was responsible — at first — for his rescue.

"[I] was attacked by protestors downtown by the arena," Smith tweeted that night from an ambulance. "They stomped and kicked me. I'm bruised and bloody but alive. My camera was destroyed. Another group of protestors pulled me out and saved my life. Thank you!"

Smith could not say who helped him, but another KDKA employee, Paul Martino, was with Smith during the attack and told veteran KDKA host Larry Richert that it was Morehouse who intervened to save their colleague.

Richert told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, "I texted Paul Martino asking if he was all right, and he told me it was David Morehouse that helped save those guys."

He explained, "Paul said they were saying — and Ian reiterated — this group (of assailants) was saying to kill him, meaning Ian. He was taking hits to the head. They destroyed his camera. He was traumatized by it, no doubt. David Morehouse was able to intervene. In that moment with a burning police car and people beating someone up, that's a pretty brave thing to do."

What else?

Richert, who knows Morehouse, texted the Penguins chief, who is a Beechview native.

"I know he's going to be humble, and he's going to say 'I'm not a hero.'" Richter recalled to the Tribune-Review. "I texted to him, 'That's the Beechview guy in you that reacted.' He texted back to say he believed any of his friends would have done the same thing in the same situation, his neighborhood (friends) he grew up with."

"To me, that's a pretty heroic act," Richert said of Morehouse assisting Smith, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, "It was a very volatile situation...He had the guts to come out and save [Smith] from a potentially very tragic ending."

A Pittsburgh Penguins spokesperson confirmed Morehouse's role, but declined to comment further.

Update: This article has been updated to correct a misspelled name.

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