When I turned towards the roaring tank, there were three people lying under its tracks. They were groaning and screaming hysterically. We rushed to help them. We quickly pulled one out. However we couldn't pull the other two women out because their legs were crushed by the tracks. The tank stopped. Leaning on the front flank of the tank, we motioned to the soldiers driving the tank to pull back instead of driving forward. In a few minutes, the tank's motor roared and it moved a little, freeing their legs. The women were no longer moaning. Evidently, they had passed out from the indescribable pain. We lifted them up and carried them to Sudervės Street. I helped carry them a bit, and then ran to find an ambulance, because there wasn't one nearby. I saw an ambulance in the far distance. Running up to it, I saw a man lying down inside who had been shot in the chest (he was undressed to his waist and his chest was bandaged). The man was pale and was lying motionless. A girl in a black coat, her face pale, was lying next to him. The driver wasn't in the ambulance. A man sitting in the ambulance told us that he couldn't take any more injured people. Suddenly it crossed my mind - why aren't these injured people being taken anywhere? Apparently the driver was looking for a way to get out of the barricaded street. I tried to look for private cars, but couldn't find any drivers in them. While I was looking for a car, I lost sight of the injured people and I don't know anything more about them...

Lithuania, 1991.01.13 : documents, testimonies, comments. - Vilnius : State Publishing Center, 1992, p. 114-115.