one of those heroes, spencer stone, is out of the hospital, back with his friends. he is sharing his story publicly for the first time. take a listen. it feels very unreal. it feels like a dream. reporter: bearing the visible reminders of a bloody confrontation, u.s. airman spencer stone relives the moment he led a charge against a gunman on a french train. i turned around and saw that he had what looked to be an ak-47. it looked like it was jammed or wasn t working and he was trying to charge the weapon. alek just hit me on the shoulder and said let s go. reporter: those two words rallied three friends together. they sprang into action tackling the gun-wielding man. when he entered the car, we saw him cocking the ak-47 so it was either do something or die. alek grabbed the gun out of his hold while i put him in a chokehold. i didn t really have a state of awareness, it wasn t a conscious decision.
getting out with a weapon. so, i was in shear sisterer. when you got out of the car i was still? shear terror. and repositioned yourself and took aim at the car again, that wasn t a conscious decision to fire? yes, it was, when i pointed at the car, yes. each of those last three times? right. and as i recall, it was like to shoot once, but obviously, i did shoot three times. so you could imagine the but however. mr. dunn, you said several times throughout the course of the day that you didn t call the police until the next morning. are you talking about the morning of the 24th? yes, sir. who was it that you called? could you tell me the name of the officer? i don t remember his name. but he was here yesterday. and i didn t call him personally. he was called on my behalf. okay. and is it your testimony that
you called ken? yes. wasn t that the law enforcement officer you were talking about? well, at 8:30 in the monk, i called him and i went and spoke with him and asked him to contact law enforcement on my behalf. your phone number at the time s it ate 202 phone number that i called at 8:30. 202-365-8150. it s a washington, d.c. number. would it refresh your recollection to explain who called you? you called him, he called you? judge, if i can object. improper predicate. can we approach? sure.