they also asked Charles if she needed an ambulance.
I think the dispatcher did ok but her tone wasn't comforting or assuring that police were on the way.
new findings, dispatcher under scrutiny for saying "f---ing b****." You can listen to it and decide for yourself. The alleged remarks come at the 1:42 mark in the video below. I don't know how to attach the video, but you can find a link to it here:
http://www.clevelandleader.com/node/20882
911 operator who took Amanda Berry's call under review
http://cleveland.cbslocal.com/2013/05/09/911-operator-who-took-amanda-berrys-call-under-review/
bbm snipped from article ==> While the call-taker complied with policies and procedures which enabled a very fast response by police, we have noted some concerns which will be the focus of our review, including the call-takers failure to remain on the line with Ms. Berry until police arrived on scene, the post, attributed to Cleveland Department of Public Safety director Martin L. Flask, stated.
new findings, dispatcher under scrutiny for saying "f---ing b****." You can listen to it and decide for yourself. The alleged remarks come at the 1:42 mark in the video below. I don't know how to attach the video, but you can find a link to it here:
http://www.clevelandleader.com/node/20882
I'd like to hear ALL the 911 calls, including the one where they called back to check if it was a hoax. The demeanor of the operators makes me wonder if there was an earlier call from Ramsey that they did not believe. It wouldn't surprise me at all.
Dispatcher: We're going to send them as soon as we get a car open.
Caller: No, I need them now before he gets back.
Dispatcher: All right; we're sending them, OK?
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/05/0...fter-escaping-alleged-abductor/#ixzz2TyLDQxXr
01:18 Dispatcher: I got, I got that, dear.
For him to call her both "dear" and a "*advertiser censored**ing b****" would be kind of contradictory, don't you think? And I can hear "dear". I don't hear "*advertiser censored**ing b****".
It took Amanda saying that she needed the police now, before he gets back for the dispatcher to acknowledge that a car would be sent now. The first response was that they would send the police as soon as a car was open.
There is a person calling in as having been kidnapped and being missing for 10 years and is now free(sure, it might sound like a crank call, but a dispatcher cannot assume that). Instead of dispatch telling the caller that the police are being sent immediately, let me know when they get there, the caller is told to talk with the police when they get there, they will send a car as soon as it is open (which means in how many minutes, hours?) The caller is panic stricken that her jailer will return, and is not being treated as someone who needs immediate help.
If the dispatcher had just sent a car when it was "open", how long would it have taken? Probably longer than 5 minutes. It is possible the dispatcher just did not rank the importance of this particular case properly, and a review will show if the process needs to be rethought.
It took Amanda saying that she needed the police now, before he gets back for the dispatcher to acknowledge that a car would be sent now. The first response was that they would send the police as soon as a car was open.
There is a person calling in as having been kidnapped and being missing for 10 years and is now free(sure, it might sound like a crank call, but a dispatcher cannot assume that). Instead of dispatch telling the caller that the police are being sent immediately, let me know when they get there, the caller is told to talk with the police when they get there, they will send a car as soon as it is open (which means in how many minutes, hours?) The caller is panic stricken that her jailer will return, and is not being treated as someone who needs immediate help.
If the dispatcher had just sent a car when it was "open", how long would it have taken? Probably longer than 5 minutes. It is possible the dispatcher just did not rank the importance of this particular case properly, and a review will show if the process needs to be rethought.
Called her "dear" then chuckled
He called her "*advertiser censored**ing b****" after he hung up.
She said who she was as well as being kidnapped multiple times
He sounded like he couldn't be bothered with her phone call.
You may be right that that is a fact in Cleveland. It is not a fact everywhere. Some places, if there is an emergency and all cars are busy, they pull a car off a non-emergency call. They don't wait for it to be open, or finished with the current call (people get out of tickets that way around here). And since the police units did not seem to be dispatched until after Amanda said she needed them now, before he came back, that could be a reason for a review. Review doesn't mean anyone did something wrong, specifically, but to see if there might have been a better way.Thats a possibility. She reported that she had been kidnaped, escaped, and was at a safe location. Going on just that information, thats not even a crime in progress. It's a non-emergency situation. They could have told her to stay there, and they would send some detectives out to talk to her. Fortunately they did handle it as an emergency.
What the operator told her is really not important. Police units had already been dispatched, and were responding to that address. As for sending a car when it's open, that was the operator telling her the truth. If there are no cars available, then nobody is going to come. Thats a fact.
And since the police units did not seem to be dispatched until after Amanda said she needed them now,