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Wireless 9-1-1 Tragedies The following stories are examples of
actual tragedies in which 9-1-1 was called from wireless telephones, and
the callers could not be located:
Rochester, NY
-- A 19-year-old female college student was abducted from a
suburban shopping plaza and driven around, assaulted and murdered by her
attacker. The victim was able to dial 9-1-1 from her wireless phone
during the attack, and operators listened as it occurred, struggling to
figure out where she was. The victim's father, David Koon, has since
become a community activist and Assemblyman in NY State, and has
supported statewide efforts to appropriate money for Wireless 9-1-1
Phase I and II.
Miami, FL
-- The story of Karla Gutierrez’s drowning quickly gained national
coverage after she dialed 9-1-1 on her wireless phone from her sinking
car in a Miami canal. Unable to escape the car and with dispatchers
unable to locate the scene of Gutierrez’s accident, the woman perished
before emergency help could reach her.
Atlanta, GA
-- Esther Green, wife of New York Jets defensive back Victor
Green, was abducted with her 10-month-old daughter by carjackers in
April of 1999. She was able to call 9-1-1 secretly from her cell phone
and drop discreet hints about where she was. It took police twenty
minutes to decipher her hints, catch up with the suspects, and free
Green and her daughter.
Santa Fe, NM
– Officials were unable to respond promptly to a White Rock
woman’s request for help after she dialed 9-1-1 from a cell phone. The
woman, who had been brutally beaten by her boyfriend, was able to convey
the nature of her injuries, but not her location. The dispatcher was
forced to keep guessing until he established the exact whereabouts of
the woman. In the middle of the call, the angry boyfriend returned and
seconds later the phone was disconnected.
Fort Lauderdale, FL
– Denise Murray was forced to wait seven minutes and
make three separate 9-1-1 calls from her cellular phone before help was
dispatched after her daughter was impaled by a three-foot steel rod that
had crashed through their windshield. Murray was forced to exit the
interstate and find a major intersection in order to give the
dispatchers her location.
Littleton, CO
– Law enforcement officials wasted valuable time securing a
gym during the Columbine High School crisis after a prank caller from
outside the school told the dispatcher that a victim there was bleeding
to death. Officials were unable to determine which of the dozens of cell
phone calls they received during the crisis came from inside the school.
Day County, SD
– Karen Nelson spent 40 hours in temperatures that dropped to
30 degrees below zero when a blizzard stranded her in her pickup truck.
Although Nelson was able to dial 9-1-1, she was unable to tell her
rescuers where she was. While the Day County Sheriff’s office was
eventually able to locate the car, it took them five hours to place the
vehicle within a 35-mile radius.
Orlando, FL
– A man collapsed on the West Orange Trail and died of a heart
attack. A bystander called 9-1-1 from her cellular phone but was
confused about her exact location on the trail. By the time rescuers
were able to locate the caller the man was dead.
Lansing, MI
– A woman’s 9-1-1 call was punctuated by screams as her
ex-husband brutally stabbed her to death. The police were unable to
pinpoint the location of the call until after she was dead.
San Jose, CA
– After Zoya Moghaddas smashed her car into a tree, she dialed
9-1- 1 from her cellular phone. Moghaddas was bleeding so profusely she
couldn’t see and was unable to tell her rescuers where she was. She was
then forced to wait for almost an hour before police were able to locate
her.
Fort Wayne, IN
– Jon Charleston died after it took authorities two hours to
locate his overturned car in a ditch. Charleston had called 9-1-1 from
his cellular phone. Rural Michigan
– Shira Levine was rear-ended and suffered minor damages while
driving in rural Michigan. While no one was injured, she did call 9-1-1.
She informed the dispatcher of her location and then waited 30 minutes
for the cruiser to arrive. When he failed to materialize, she called
again. The two roads she had given to the dispatcher to help them locate
her actually crossed twice in two spots, and the cruiser was looking at
the wrong intersection.
New Jersey
– Police have been unable to trace a series of false bomb threats
in southern New Jersey because they were made from untraceable cell
phones. National Emergency Number Association (NENA)
Contact: Dale Curtis 422 Beecher Road 1-800-332-3911 Columbus, OH 43230 nena_media@yahoo.com |
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Southern Oregon Regional Communications Copyright 2007 www.sorc911.com 10 S Oakdale, Medford, OR 97501 (541) 776-7186 |
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