Bradenton man traveling to Ukraine to rescue refugees


A Bradenton man whose family is from Ukraine is preparing to travel there to help those who can’t escape. He, his father, and cousin plan to deliver supplies across the border, while rescuing as many as they can.

Vladimir Tokarev spent a decade in the U.S. Marine Corps and Army National Guard. He also worked as a police officer and firefighter.

“You just can’t be afraid,” Tokarev said. “I’ve stared death in the face, and you just go do your new job either way.”

He is used to running toward trouble, not away. And he knows that Ukraine is in trouble.

“God forbid we ever end up in a situation like this,” Tokarev said. “You’d be grateful if somebody showed up for you.”

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His family is originally from Ukraine. They came to the United States in 1989 as refugees, seeking religious freedom, before the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. That’s the year Vladimir was born. 
When his father Vasily Tokarev, a pastor in Massachusetts, called to say he’s traveling to Ukraine to help, Vladimir said – not without me.

“I wasn’t planning to get myself involved in this,” Tokarev said. “When your dad calls you, asking for body armor when you’re fully capable of going, you go.”

He, his dad, and cousin Eugene Loboda will fly into Poland, buy 22-passenger vans, and drive into Ukrainian hot zones to deliver food, medical supplies, and body armor to those unable to escape.
Vladimir is medically retired with back and nerve issues. While he can’t do a lot of heavy lifting, one thing he can do is drive.

“One van, for us, is going to save hundreds, maybe thousands of lives,” Tokarev said.  

READ Bradenton photographer tells ‘profoundly moving’ story of Ukrainian refugee crisis

They’ll join friends already on the ground, transporting women, children, and the elderly safely across the border. “They’re constantly going in and out every day, you know, pulling people out, resupplying,” Tokarev said.

Vladimir can speak Russian. He understands some Ukrainian. Once they’re settled, he hopes to be a point of contact for any more friends willing to lend a hand.

“This could be the start of something bigger,” Tokarev said. “When you’re down and out there, your whole life is destroyed, and some guy from the United States comes over there, you know, he’s trying to help you, I think it brings some hope that there are some people in the world that are willing to help you.”

Vladimir’s father and cousin are booked to fly to Poland on April 4. Once he gets all his paperwork signed, he’ll be right behind them.

In the meantime, they’re working to raise $40,000 to buy vans, supplies, and body armor for the evacuees and have started a GoFundMe account.



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Marine veterans travel to Ukraine to rescue civilians, bring medical aid and supplies


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While Ukrainians flee the country amid Russia’s onslaught, many U.S. military veterans are flocking to the region to help.

Former Marine sniper and Medal of Honor recipient Dakota Meyer and Marine veteran Chad Robichaux boarded a plane to Ukraine to help evacuate American citizens and civilians. Armed with only the medical aid and supplies they arranged, Meyer and Robichaux set out to save those “on the side of good,” they told Fox News.

Members of Ukraine's Territorial Defense Forces, volunteer military units of the Armed Forces, train in a city park in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Members of Ukraine’s Territorial Defense Forces, volunteer military units of the Armed Forces, train in a city park in Kyiv, Ukraine.
(AP/Efrem Lukatsky)

“We’re just trying to make a difference where we fit and supply medical aid and supplies,” Meyer told “Jesse Watters Primetime” on Monday,” “as well as helping get good people out, Americans, people on the side of good.”

While some U.S. veterans volunteered to join the Ukrainian resistance in a position of combat, Meyer and Robichaux said they are focussed on using their experience as special operations veterans to evacuate Americans and those wounded by Russian forces.

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“I know a lot of veterans talking about going in in combatant roles,” Robichaux, a co-founder of Save Our Allies, said. “For us, we are mostly special operation veterans. We have a tremendous amount of experience. We have done our time fighting. We’re here to do the right thing and help people that need help, evacuate Americans, evacuate wounded people. Bring medical aid to the frontline. Just support the effort and stand on the right side of this terrible, terrible thing.”

A Belarusian volunteer arrives in Ukraine to help the Ukrainian army fight against Russian invaders.

A Belarusian volunteer arrives in Ukraine to help the Ukrainian army fight against Russian invaders.
(AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

Robichaux’s group, Save Our Allies, safely rescued 17,000 American citizens and SIV Afghans from Afghanistan when the Taliban seized control, he told Watters.

“We didn’t engage in any combat there. Even though…we don’t like the Taliban. But we stayed out of trouble there and [we will do] the same thing here. We are just here to help,” he said.

With that said, Meyer and Robichaux acknowledged the complexity of the situation.

“You know, it’s not like Iraq and Afghanistan,” Meyer said. “I mean, this is two sovereign nations who are fighting against each other. You know tit-for-tat. This is a complex situation. And so the intel aspect of this and making sure you are doing this right is not only going to keep you and your team safe but even more importantly it’s going to help you keep the people we are trying to help be safe. As well as be able to do this, you know, long term. And that’s kind of what we’re doing. 

Ukrainians crowd under a destroyed bridge as they try to flee from the outskirts of Kyiv as Russian shelling persisted through the weekend.

Ukrainians crowd under a destroyed bridge as they try to flee from the outskirts of Kyiv as Russian shelling persisted through the weekend.
((AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) )

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“We are not trying to rush in there,” he said. “Our team has already gone in and made successful extractions. But, right now, we are trying to make sure that we have got everything lined up just to ensure that not just that we’re safe but that the people we are trying to help, that we’re not putting them in a worse situation which is very critical right now.

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Ukraine Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov wrote on Facebook Monday that the military has received “more than 20,000 appeals from foreigners who are ready to come to Ukraine and defend the world from the Russian Nazis on the Ukrainian front” in order to prevent “the Kremlin’s evil” from spreading.



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Rescue interview, Legislative Session, Quiet and cool weather, Missing people, Explora internship – KRQE NEWS 13 – Breaking News, Albuquerque News, New Mexico News, Weather, and Videos


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Fire fighters rescue person trapped in travel trailer after tree falls during storm


LAFAYETTE, La. – Beginning late Friday night, strong winds and rain entered the Scott area.

Early Saturday morning, Scott resident Teddy Connor says he was laying in bed in his camper on D. Arceneaux Road, when he felt the camper begin to rock. He says he heard a loud noise, jumped out of bed, and noticed a tree had fallen and was blocking his door and window.

He couldn’t push the door open because the tree was pinned against the door, and he called the Scott Fire Department. Connor says they arrived on scene within 5-10 minutes.

Firefighters utilized rescue equipment and chainsaws in an effort to remove the tree, says fire chief Chad Sonnier.

Connor was able to escape the camper without injury, and he’s thankful the tree didn’t fall a few feet in another direction.

“If it would’ve been a few feet over, I would’ve been a dead man,” he tells KATC.

He’s also thankful for the first responders who arrived on scene so quickly to rescue him and for neighbors who he says came out of their home just to see if he was okay.

“I want to thank each and every one of y’all,” Connor directed to the fire department. “I’m thankful and blessed for y’all to even be out here last night. Because y’all saved my life…something wrong could’ve happened to me. So I thank them for what they did for me last night. I thank God for allowing me to even be still alive because I could’ve been dead.”

Connor has set up a GoFundMe account to assist with damage expenses. You can find that here.

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US Travel supports President Biden’s American Rescue Plan


American economic recovery is contingent on a robust recovery within the travel industry, which is why it will continue to need substantial relief for travel industry businesses

  • President Biden’s American Rescue Plan lays out much-needed relief that can’t come soon enough
  • The travel industry lost millions of jobs last year, accounting for nearly 40% of all jobs lost
  • U.S. Travel is grateful to Congress and the administration for their focus on combating the virus and providing relief to America’s hardest-hit industries

U.S. Travel Association President and CEO Roger Dow issued the following statement in support of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package known as the American Rescue Plan:

“President Biden’s plan lays out much-needed relief that can’t come soon enough, and we’re encouraged by the momentum in Congress to advance this crucial package. Accelerating the distribution of vaccines is the key to restarting travel and jumpstarting the broader American economy, and we are highly supportive of the robust federal leadership role to get as many people vaccinated as quickly as possible.

“We are also very encouraged by the measures to provide additional grants and loans to small businesses in the hardest-hit industries, which include travel. The Paycheck Protection Program is set to expire at the end of the month, but the economic pain of the pandemic will linger far beyond that point. Extending the program’s application deadline until December 31 and allowing for a third draw on loans will be vital to ensuring struggling travel industry businesses can maintain operations and keep workers on payrolls.

“The travel industry lost millions of jobs last year, accounting for nearly 40% of all jobs lost. A broader American economic recovery is contingent on a robust recovery within the travel industry, which is why we will continue to need substantial relief for travel industry businesses.

“U.S. Travel is grateful to Congress and the administration for their focus on combating the virus and providing relief to America’s hardest-hit industries. We look forward to continuing to work with the federal government on additional recovery and stimulus measures to shorten the recovery period and restore American jobs as quickly as possible.”



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