THIS is the jaw-dropping moment a stranger sprints into the road to save two toddlers from oncoming traffic.
Shocking dashcam footage captures John Brittingham rushing into a four-lane road in Brevard County, Florida.
The father-of-five can be seen urgently waving his arms, desperately signalling for drivers to slow down as cars approach from both directions.
Without hesitation, Brittingham scoops one toddler into his arms.
The second child shuffles toward him, reaching out her hand.
He then grabs her, clutching both children tightly as he retreats to the side of the road and disappears down a nearby street.
Amid the panic, the children’s parents are nowhere to be seen.
It later transpired the family were blocks away at an Airbnb, blissfully unware of the danger their children were in.
Brittingham had been driving past the area after finishing a real estate photo shoot nearby when he spotted the toddlers wandering dangerously close to traffic.
He quickly pulled over – a split-second decision that likely saved two young lives.
The entire ordeal unfolded in just six seconds.
“I was terrified thinking of what could have happened to them,” Brittingham told local media.
“The rest of my life would have been ruined.”
He went on to say the pair could not have been more than two-years-old.
Brittingham then began knocking door-to-door along the nearby street.
Eventually, he reached the family’s Airbnb, where he shouted to get their attention.
Upon learning what nearly happened, “an elderly couple and a young girl” unreservedly apologised.
“I was like, ‘Yeah, I know, I’m just glad I could them back to you. They were out in the road, and your gate was open’,” Brittingham said.
The good Samaritan later explained he chose not to contact police, saying his “main concern was to reunite them”.
“My adrenaline spiked. I had a migraine when I finally got home,” he said.
“I was drained completely for the rest of the day.”
Brittingham’s employer, a Florida-based drone company, later condemned a passersby who failed to stop, instead taking aim at strangers for “honking” at the lost girls.
“Y’all this could have turned out so tragic,” the company wrote on Facebook.
“Please always watch out. You never know.”



