
The man who was trapped in the wreckage of a collapsed building in D.C. last week didn鈥檛 just think he was going to die, his sister told WTOP Monday 鈥 he thought he had died.
Leonardo Moreto, 27, was rescued Thursday afternoon an hour and a half after the building he was working on, at 916 Kennedy St. NW, collapsed, trapping him under three stories of rubble. Fire officials said he was trapped against a beam, with about 8 inches of space around him.
His sister, Leidiane Guimaraes, said Moreto told her 鈥渉e actually asked the D.C. firefighters if he was still alive.鈥
He told his sister, 鈥淵ou were in the movie,鈥 Guimaraes said. He added that the notion that people who are dying see their entire life flash before them like a movie 鈥渋s not a fiction. 鈥 Everybody I loved came to my mind and in front of my eyes. 鈥 I heard this voice telling me to go back.鈥
Guimaraes said Moreto鈥檚 spine was broken, and that the doctors told her most people in his condition don鈥檛 make it to the hospital. If his spine had gone in the other direction, she said, his aorta would have been cut, which results in death in seconds.
Moreto went in for about nine hours of surgery and is still in the hospital. Guimaraes said a doctor told her it鈥檚 not likely he鈥檒l walk again: 鈥淗e doesn鈥檛 say don鈥檛 have hope, but don鈥檛 get so many expectations.鈥
Her brother doesn鈥檛 know any of this yet — 鈥淗e doesn鈥檛 really talk. He鈥檚 in and out with all the medications,鈥 Guimaraes said.
‘They have no clue’
Moreto is 27, single and has no children, she said. He came to the U.S. from Brazil days before the pandemic hit, and when he had to decide where he would ride it out, he chose to stay with his sister and help with her daughters, now 3 and 2. He applied for a student visa, has been accepted at a school to improve his English, and hopes to pursue a master鈥檚 degree in civil engineering.
Guimaraes said she hasn鈥檛 told their parents yet 鈥 they live in Brazil, and can鈥檛 come to the States because of COVID-19 restrictions. She just told them Moreto lost his phone.
鈥淪o far they have no clue. And I know it sounds bad that they don鈥檛 know. But I know my parents — my mom, she cannot take it.鈥
They鈥檒l find out soon enough, as Moreto鈥檚 story comes out, but Guimaraes wants it that way. She said she wants answers as to what brought the house down on her brother, and she wants him to get the physical and mental help he鈥檚 going to need: 鈥淚 don’t want to see my brother laying down in bed or staying at home afterwards in a wheelchair. And I know, OK, life will continue, but he needs to adapt.鈥
It鈥檚 hard for her too 鈥 she said she told her husband, 鈥淚鈥檓 not happy anymore; I don鈥檛 see happiness in life.鈥 She added, 鈥渋t鈥檚 not my fault, but I feel bad, because I asked him to stay鈥 in the U.S.
‘We need to ask for answers’
The first order of business is recovery: 鈥淩ight now, the most important [is] for him to get better from the surgery, and then we’re going to do whatever we can to help him out and still have hope he’s going to be able to walk.鈥
After that, though, she wants answers. 鈥淲hoever鈥檚 fault it is鈥 鈥 the construction company or the District 鈥 鈥渨e鈥檙e going to go after. That鈥檚 one thing I can guarantee you.鈥
She added: 鈥淚鈥檓 not afraid. I joined the Army because I trust in the power of United States law. And because of that, I’m hiring a lawyer and we need to figure it out. We need to ask for answers. 鈥 Yes, it was raining, but come on 鈥 the building doesn鈥檛 collapse like that.鈥
She had nothing but praise for the doctors who took care of her brother, and especially for the firefighters who pulled him from the wrecked building:
鈥淵ou saved my brother’s life. You brought him back to me, back to our family, and we are going to be thankful forever.鈥
Guimaraes has started a campaign for Moreto’s expenses.

