‘Selfless’: Hialeah EMT killed in a Fort Lauderdale highway crash died helping others

Yanaisa Pulido put the welfare of others before hers. Now, her family needs others to help after she was killed in a six-car crash in Fort Lauderdale while aiding people stranded on Interstate 95 over the weekend.

Those who knew her say the 23-year-old Hialeah paramedic died doing what she did best: helping others when they needed it most.

Leannie Pulido, one of her six siblings and a dispatcher at the same EMS company where her sister worked, said the paramedic was dedicated to helping everyone, on the job or not.

“She was always looking out for others before herself,” her 18-year-old sister said.

A six-car crash shut down Interstate 95 southbound near Marina Mile Bouelvard on Sunday, Feb. 11, 2024. Florida Highway Patrol
A six-car crash shut down Interstate 95 southbound near Marina Mile Bouelvard on Sunday, Feb. 11, 2024. Florida Highway Patrol

How did the crash unfold on I-95?

Around 4 a.m. Sunday, Pulido was behind the wheel of a black Kia Forte sedan going south on I-95 — heading home after a 12-hour shift — when she stopped in one of the center lanes and got out of her car to help two other drivers involved in a crash, the Florida Highway Patrol said.

However, as a 41-year-old Doral man driving a silver Cadillac ATS sedan began to slow down to avoid a collision with the back of Pulido’s car, a 19-year-old Pembroke Pines woman in a black Lexus IS300 crashed into the rear of his car.

The impact caused the man’s sedan, with a 34-year-old woman and a 7-year-old boy as passengers, to rotate counter-clockwise as it moved forward — subsequently throwing Pulido and smashing the left side of her car.

Moments later, the driver behind the wheel of a sixth vehicle crashed into one of the cars involved in the first accident, a concrete barrier wall and the silver Cadillac.

The man driving the Cadillac was critically injured, while his passengers were injured to a lesser extent, Florida troopers said. The woman driving the black Lexus and the two drivers involved in the first crash were not hurt.

Pulido died on the highway.

A plea for help

Pulido believed that her calling was to be a paramedic, said Victor Rigo, the general manager of Miami-Dade Ambulance, where she worked from June 2021 until Sunday.

After graduating from the Hialeah Fire Cadet program in 2019, Pulido worked for the EMS company as she completed her studies. Last year, she was deployed to areas impacted by Category 4 Hurricane Idalia.

“She took countless weeks from home to assist others up north, and she did it all with a smile and joy in her heart,” Rigo said. “She was selfless, always put others before herself.”

At her home, Pulido would make sure others were happy even if she was not, her sister said.

“Whenever she was around, it would feel like all my troubles would lift up and go away,” she said.

After dedicating her life to caring for others, the Pulido family is asking South Floridians to lend a hand in covering her funeral costs.

And it seems like their plea for help is being heard.

Over $30,000 had been raised to pay for Pulido’s funeral as of Tuesday morning.

Pulido’s funeral

Pulido’s wake is from 6 p.m. to 11:59 p.m. Wednesday at National Funeral Homes, 151 NW 37th Ave.

Her funeral is at 1:45 p.m. Thursday at Memorial Plan Flagler Memorial Park, 5301 W Flagler St.