Search found 5 matches

by ELB
Thu Oct 13, 2016 4:21 pm
Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
Topic: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...
Replies: 11
Views: 1237

Re: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...

My own comment about lawsuits reminds me:

Some years back I read that a lawyer (on behalf of a client) was suing the City of Chicago for failing the respond properly to a 911 call when his client's house burned down. He obtained 911 call records (number of calls, duration, response times, etc). He was so surprised/shocked at what he found that he posted them (detailed listing) online publicly (I believe he got them through open records requests, not through discovery).

Then thing that shocked him was that 20% of 911 calls were not being answered at all. People didn't even get a chance to get hung up on, they were left to ring until they gave up.

The city went to court to force him to pull the information from his website, claiming it would help terrorist plan attacks. He did pull them off line, I don't know whether because of direct court action or he decided his strategy would be better served by doing so, but it was pretty eye-opening.
by ELB
Thu Oct 13, 2016 4:15 pm
Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
Topic: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...
Replies: 11
Views: 1237

Re: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...

vjallen75 wrote:
ELB wrote:No, she was canned. It took awhile to notice, but they did notice she had an unusually large number of short calls, and when they played the recordings, they discovered she was hanging up on people. She faces two misdemeanor charges of tampering with the 911 system.
I'm no expert in laws but shouldn't she be tried for more than just two misdemeanors? I understand that may be all they can factually prove, but couldn't she be tried for the calls she hung up on that resulted in death or bodily injury?
I thought that was pretty light too, but maybe there are other charges in the works pending further investigation. Maybe.

I would think a few lawsuits might arise from this. The city can probably deflect them with sovereign immunity in the long run, but might settle just to get it over with. But since she was presumably not following policy or training, she might not be protected -- not a litigation lawyer, so don't know for sure. On the other hand she probably doesn't have enough $$ to be able to sue.
by ELB
Thu Oct 13, 2016 1:35 pm
Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
Topic: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...
Replies: 11
Views: 1237

Re: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...

Abraham wrote:...and yet, she kept her job...

...
No, she was canned. It took awhile to notice, but they did notice she had an unusually large number of short calls, and when they played the recordings, they discovered she was hanging up on people. She faces two misdemeanor charges of tampering with the 911 system.
by ELB
Thu Oct 13, 2016 11:53 am
Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
Topic: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...
Replies: 11
Views: 1237

Re: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...

This is article that seems to be about the incident Mr. Li witnessed. The store owner was armed, but it appears he didn't shoot soon enough. RIP, Mr. Siddiqui.

http://www.khou.com/news/crime/funeral- ... t/93163990
by ELB
Thu Oct 13, 2016 11:45 am
Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
Topic: TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...
Replies: 11
Views: 1237

TX: Clue light comes on, now what to do...

More fun in Houston.

Background:
According to charging documents, managers at the emergency center determined that [former 911 operator Crenshenda] Williams had been involved in thousands of “short calls,” a term used to describe 911 calls that last 20 seconds or less, between October 2015 and March 2016.
Sometimes she just hung up, sometimes she hung up with a flourish:
...Williams remained on the line after terminating the call and can be heard to say, “Ain’t nobody got time for this. For real.”
And then there was this:
In one case, Williams allegedly hung up on Hua Li, an engineer who called to report a robbery in progress on March 12. Li said he had been buying lottery tickets at a RaceWay convenience store on FM 1960 West at Mills Road, when a gunman entered and tried to force his way through the door of a glassed-in security area behind the counter. As two clerks attempted to block the door, Li says he ran from the store and heard several gunshots on his way out. When he got to his car, he called 911 for help.

“They just said, ‘This is 911. How can I help you?’ I was trying to finish my sentence, and we got disconnected,” Li said.

Police said that Williams was the 911 operator, and that she terminated the call within a few seconds.

Li called a second time and got a different operator. By the time police arrived, however, the store manager had been shot and killed.
Now comes the political awakening:
Li told Channel 2 News that if 911 is not there for you, “Nobody, nobody is going to help you. You’re on your own.”
So Mr. Li, recommend you follow that line of thought to its logical conclusion...


http://www.click2houston.com/news/911-o ... on-callers

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