Massachusetts teen survives falling 200 feet off cliff in Switzerland

A rescue helicopter at the mountain in Lucerne. (Lance Benjamino via Fox 25)

A Massachusetts high school student is alive after falling more than 200 feet down a mountain on a school trip in Switzerland.

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A chaperone on the trip just happened to be the Middleboro fire chief and he jumped into action to rescue the unnamed teen.

The rescue was even more complicated by a language barrier. The tour guides spoke German and Italian, they had to translate instructions from the chief to get the rescue organized-- all this, after the chief took a fall himself.

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“All I kept thinking about was it that was my son I would want somebody down there with him as well,” Chief Lance Benjamino said.

The Whitman-Hanson Regional High School students on the trip were on a mountainside in Lucerne, Switzerland when the boy fell.

“We couldn’t hear him or see him over the edge,” Benjamino said.

Benjamino knew there wasn’t any time to waste. He and a tour guide made their way down, while mountain employees organized the rescue equipment the chief asked for.

“When I traversed down the mountain I started to lose my footing as well and I slid about 75 to a hundred feet and then I climbed, realistically I crawled down the mountain to find the student who thankfully was conscious and alert. He was banged up pretty bad.” Benjamino said.

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