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I don’t think there was anyone living with them at the time of the murders. That is something the 4 year old should be easily able to confirm - if they had a guest staying over for a few days.
I would push back on that a little. In the world of finance, consulting, etc. no one is calling 911 if you miss your first client call/meeting of the day.In the professional world that's not how that works. If you work with clients and have a schedule, you show up, if you don't show up it's life or death. I understand some people have never had highly skilled white collar jobs that is front facing to clients, but this is how it works in all of them. So many of us that work in these types of jobs have explained this too many times. I get that you don't understand it, but I promise if my boss missed a meeting without calling me, and his wife/grown kids didn't answer I would be on the phone to the cops so fast.
It's disheartening to see so much energy wasted on calling the coworkers strange for calling 911 so quickly rather than giving them the high praise they deserve. Their actions helped to get those children out of that house as quickly as possible.
I would push back on that a little. In the world of finance, consulting, etc. no one is calling 911 if you miss your first client call/meeting of the day.
But I think in medicine, where an entire office of nurses and patients is waiting on you, and you are never late, it's different. Also, if his drive was 90 minutes and he wasn't picking up the phone that probably meant to them he wasn't even on his way yet at 9 AM, which would be a huge red flag.
Exactly! There’s more to the panicI can think of lots of awful reasons for someone not to show up to work on time or answer the phone, but I can also think of lots of not so awful reasons -so unless I have some specific reason to think they are in danger I think it’s odd to not check on them 1st before calling 911
I think they would have needed to reschedule the patients for that morning at least, given he was unreachable and lived over an hour away. Tell them dentist got a family emergency suddenly or something. So if they did that, the issue of a long line of patients waiting goes away. Given that, did the office overreact with the multiple 911 calls and the multiple people showing up at the house in addition to LE? IMO, yes. It seems they were more concerned about his wellbeing than waiting patients. JMO.I would push back on that a little. In the world of finance, consulting, etc. no one is calling 911 if you miss your first client call/meeting of the day.
But I think in medicine, where an entire office of nurses and patients is waiting on you, and you are never late, it's different. Also, if his drive was 90 minutes and he wasn't picking up the phone that probably meant to them he wasn't even on his way yet at 9 AM, which would be a huge red flag.
We are going to have to agree to disagreeIn the professional world that's not how that works. If you work with clients and have a schedule, you show up, if you don't show up it's life or death. I understand some people have never had highly skilled white collar jobs that is front facing to clients, but this is how it works in all of them. So many of us that work in these types of jobs have explained this too many times. I get that you don't understand it, but I promise if my boss missed a meeting without calling me, and his wife/grown kids didn't answer I would be on the phone to the cops so fast.
Not when they’re over an hour away.Hindsight is 20/20-its odd to call 911 before going over to the house
Driving me nuts!!Enough about the &@$& 911 call, omg. Perfectly normal for a medical professional's friends and colleagues to be concerned that he hadn't shown up for his *DENTIST* job (I'd bet he generally arrived at least an hour before his first patients). Not everyone has so little concern for their friends and coworkers as some here seem to.
Moo....are you kidding. It takes 3 to 6 months to appointment sometimes. People often have to travel quite a distance. They take time off work for appointment.The patients will not suddenly disappear.I think they would have needed to reschedule the patients for that morning at least, given he was unreachable and lived over an hour away. Tell them dentist got a family emergency suddenly or something. So if they did that, the issue of a long line of patients waiting goes away. Given that, did the office overreact with the multiple 911 calls and the multiple people showing up at the house in addition to LE? IMO, yes. It seems they were more concerned about his wellbeing than waiting patients. JMO.
Yet they were able to go to the house and checkNot when they’re over an hour away.
Agree with this 100%.Keep in mind the kiddos were in the same house... If the CO idea was on my mind I'd be terrified for them and wouldn't bother wasting precious seconds, much less an hour's commute. I get not wanting to exclude anything but it just... makes sense that they'd call. I don't know what else to say.
My dentist always shows up late to appointments though there is usually a hygienist or someone to get me prepped for a cleaning etc. And are you saying real family emergencies are not possible? They have no playbook for that?Moo....are you kidding. It takes 3 to 6 months to appointment sometimes. People often have to travel quite a distance. They take time off work for appointment.The patients will not suddenly disappear.
After listening to the 911 calls numerous times I get the feeling that he told his coworkers/boss if I ever don’t show up or respond to notify authorities. I think they let someone stay with them in their home that they were helping. There was some danger surrounding this which is why the coworker said we can’t reach anybody “in that home”. Maybe this has to do with the previous unknown female who made the 911 call in April… IMO