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Onlookers cheer police officer who breaks down in tears after nerve-wracking rescue of suicidal man on ledge

Emotional New York City police bodycam video shows officers pleading with a suicidal man to hold on just a little longer – before his successful rescue.

Harrowing police bodycam video shows the rescue of a suicidal man teetering on the side of a bridge in New York City.

"We’re here for you," Officer Eleodoro Mata can be heard telling the man in a 40-minute ordeal captured on bodycam video. "Everybody’s here for you. We’re gonna help you."

The NYPD praised both Mata and his partner Carl Fayette for their roles in the dramatic rescue, which prompted cheers from onlookers when emergences services officers wearing safety harnesses finally grabbed ahold of the man and brought him to safety.

"Life is beautiful, brother," Fayette says repeatedly to the victim, seen leaning over the edge of a bridge.

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"You are beautiful, brother – please don't give up on me."

Moments before his safe rescue, the man crouched over, precariously leaning over the edge of the bridge.

Earlier in the video, Fayette confessed to the man that he has been in a similar situation himself.

"I've been in your shoes, man," he says. "It's not worth it…there are solutions."

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"There is a way to ensure you get out of this situation," he adds.

When the ESU officers grabbed the man, Fayette is seen reeling away from the ledge, toward a squad car, where he crouches down and puts his face in his hands. Within seconds, he breaks down in tears.

"Police officers frequently interact with people having the worst day of their lives," the NYPD said in a statement shared to X. "Two weeks ago, Officers Fayette & Mata talked to a distraught man in crisis for nearly 40 minutes until ESU officers rescued him."

Both officers work for the NYPD's 26th Precinct, where their commander praised them on X last week, before the bodycam video had been made public.

"They spoke to the man with genuine empathy to let him know they cared and that help was available, & with the assistance of our @NYPDSpecialops, they got him help," he wrote.

The National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline can be reached by dialing 988.

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