mysteriew
A diamond in process
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2004
- Messages
- 23,813
- Reaction score
- 892
I think part of the dispatcher's problem in the 911 call was a problem of perception. I'm not sure he was aware of who he was talking to, maybe thought he was getting a call about a 'normal' visitation. So he may have been thinking he was talking to a grandma or friend who was upset that the 'supervised' rule was being ignored. I would guess that happens pretty frequently, and probably usually gets resolved without injury.
IMO he thought this was just an hysterical supervisor, and for that reason he wasn't too concerned. He may have thought the supervisor was just po'd because the parent was blocking the supervision order. Not a 'serious' emergency.
But what he did was ignore the seriousness of the fact that the court ordered supervised visitation for a reason. And that no matter who it is, it is serious when the parent tries to block the supervision. This could have been a case where the children were in danger of ongoing abuse, sexual abuse, or even in danger of intimidation because they were witnesses to some crime of the parents. As it was, it was a suicidal parent who decided to take the kids with him.
He had to get more info from the 911 caller I agree. But he had the option to roll an LE officer as soon as he determined the type of emergency. He had the option to make it a priority call. He didn't do that. He spent way too much time on the call, asking questions but not seeming to listen to the answers. He asked unneccessary questions. He made judgements ignoring a court order.
911 gets a lot of unneccessary calls and the dispatcher has to try to weed those out. And they are trained to weed those out. But IMO he heard the word visitation and immediately defaulted to a preconceieved judgement of non emergent. He didn't remember his training and he didn't listen to the caller. And to me, that is the major sin. The caller is his eyes on the situation and he wasn't listening to the caller. The social worker said court order, supervised visitation. The worker said smelled gas, blocked visit supervisor. The worker said life threatening and even that she was concerned for her own safety. But the dispatcher had already told himself, non emergent and didn't even hear what she said or totally discounted it.
IMO he thought this was just an hysterical supervisor, and for that reason he wasn't too concerned. He may have thought the supervisor was just po'd because the parent was blocking the supervision order. Not a 'serious' emergency.
But what he did was ignore the seriousness of the fact that the court ordered supervised visitation for a reason. And that no matter who it is, it is serious when the parent tries to block the supervision. This could have been a case where the children were in danger of ongoing abuse, sexual abuse, or even in danger of intimidation because they were witnesses to some crime of the parents. As it was, it was a suicidal parent who decided to take the kids with him.
He had to get more info from the 911 caller I agree. But he had the option to roll an LE officer as soon as he determined the type of emergency. He had the option to make it a priority call. He didn't do that. He spent way too much time on the call, asking questions but not seeming to listen to the answers. He asked unneccessary questions. He made judgements ignoring a court order.
911 gets a lot of unneccessary calls and the dispatcher has to try to weed those out. And they are trained to weed those out. But IMO he heard the word visitation and immediately defaulted to a preconceieved judgement of non emergent. He didn't remember his training and he didn't listen to the caller. And to me, that is the major sin. The caller is his eyes on the situation and he wasn't listening to the caller. The social worker said court order, supervised visitation. The worker said smelled gas, blocked visit supervisor. The worker said life threatening and even that she was concerned for her own safety. But the dispatcher had already told himself, non emergent and didn't even hear what she said or totally discounted it.