An Bay Area woman is being called a hero for pulling a woman from an overturned car on Interstate 80 on Wednesday morning, reports KTVU.

Keenia Williams is used to that kind of praise, though. This is the second time she has pulled someone from a potentially deadly wreck in less than two years.

Williams, a single mother from Vallejo, was driving on I-80 near Pinole when she saw two cars collide in front of her. One of those cars, a Honda Fit, flipped onto its roof, according to the California Highway Patrol.

Williams, seeing a female victim was hurt, jumped from her car and ran toward the accident.

“The woman, she was bleeding a lot from her head and she was stuck,” she told KTVU.

Williams was then able to pull the woman from the smoking vehicle after loosening her seat belt. The victim was transported to a hospital with minor injuries.

“The officer was like, ‘What made you do that?’ I’m like, ‘Well, it’s not the first time that I saved somebody,'” she said.

On Oct. 19, 2011, Williams was driving on Highway 101 in the early morning hours when she saw a big rig crash, flip onto its side and burst into flames.

“Most people kept going. I don’t know what made me stop, so I am glad I did,” Williams said. “If that was me, I would want somebody to stop and save my life.”

In an similar series of events to Wednesday’s incident, Williams sprang from her car, jumped over streams of flaming diesel fuel and pulled the driver, Michael Finerty of Concord, away from the burning wreckage.

He was treated for minor injuries and released.

Williams received a Good Samaritan Award from San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee in 2011 and was one of 20 finalists for a special award from the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation.