Kidnapped 10-year-old girl rescued thanks to 2 sanitation workers

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Wednesday, February 10, 2021
Kidnapped 10-year-old rescued thanks to 2 sanitation workers
THESE MEN ARE HEROES! Two Louisiana trash collectors used quick thinking to block an Amber Alert suspect vehicle in with their garbage truck.

NEW IBERIA, Louisiana -- Two men working their usual trash route in New Iberia Parish, Louisiana, helped to save a little girl from a kidnapping.

The two Pelican Waste and Debris workers sprang into action when they recognized the car she was taken in after seeing the vehicle described in an Amber Alert out in a field while on their trash route Monday morning.

"Something told me, 'Just look.' I said 'What's that car doing way ducked off in in the field like that?''' Dion Merrick said.

"And he was like, 'B, you know what I just saw... man, that looks like that silver Nissan on the Amber Alert,'" Brandon Antoine recalled.

Merrick immediately started a livestream on Facebook when he noticed the Nissan in an empty field, KATC reports. The car matched the description in the Amber Alert sent late the night before.

"I called 911 at the same time, backed my [garbage] truck up in the driveway to make sure he didn't get out," Merrick said. "I talked to the 911 operator and she basically told me it would be about a minute before a deputy was going to be on the scene."

Both men are fathers and say what happened strikes close to home. They said the decision to get involved was a no-brainer.

"Thank God, man, because I got a little girl. I'm on my job doing what I got to do," Merrick said in the livestream.

The suspect, 33-year-old Michael Sereal, is listed on the parish's sex offender database and was convicted in 2016.

In Merrick's livestream video, Sereal could be heard yelling "Why are you doing this to me?" as police took him into custody.

Jalisa Lasalle, 10, went missing from a family member's home between 1 and 2 p.m. the day before the men spotted the suspect vehicle.

She is now safe because of the workers who decided not to look the other way.

Pelican CEO Roddie Matherne praised his employees in a statement to ABC News.

"We couldn't be prouder of Dion and Brandon," Matherne said in an email. "In fact, All of our Pelican Waste team have been heroically working without fail during the pandemic quietly, professionally, and consistently serving the communities where we collect garbage & debris. They often respond in other ways while on the road. This was an exceptional thing that may very well have saved a little girl's [life]."

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