/r/911Calls
Welcome to the subreddit! This is a place for those disturbing 911 calls that can leave you feeling uneasy and questioning humanity.
This is a place for those disturbing 911 calls that can leave you feeling uneasy and questioning humanity. Police release 911 calls and transcripts sometimes for help in identifying victims or those that attack/abuse/murder other people.
When posting a link, please post background information to what happened from a good source!
Subreddits you may find interesting:
http://www.reddit.com/r/911dispatchers/
http://www.reddit.com/r/allkillers
/r/911Calls
I saw this guy draw some disturbing images and post them on his snapchat. They're mainly of guns, bloody knives, and just overall a dirty messy psycho look.
He was recently expelled from my college (SCAD) for sexual harassment of his roomate and lost the case to him.
He has history of mental illnesses.
Are these grounds valid to call 911? If not what other resources could I use?
I as on radio when this call came in. My trainee first day out on her own an I think this was one of her first. I quote " NO MAM'M DON'T PLACE A TOURNIQUET ON HIS PENIS" The whole room picked on that one to listen in! Just had to share!
I'm new to Reddit and my English is pretty bad so if you don't understand anything let me know.
This happened a long time ago so I remember some things very vaguely I don't remember how old I was but I do remember that I was a young and sad teenager, then I had just tried to kill myself and there was a lot of blood so desperately I tried to call the famous 911,I don't know if it was because I lived in the middle of nowhere or because it was quite late but I called 3 different times that morning, the first time nobody answered, the next time an old woman with a tired tone answers me and as soon as I said that I had tried to commit suicide and that I was a minor, she hung up on me, the third luckily someone answered me and treated me with human decency but damn If I were really bleeding to death, I'd already be dead by the time someone finally answered me.
Anyway everything is fine, I didn't try to make a complaint since I considered it a hopeless case and I was busy in most important things. I'm still alive and wanting to live so everything is ok.
Hi! I am looking for a strange 911 call that I remember listening to. Essentially, somebody broke into a guy's home and the house's owner had the phone, then the criminal introduced himself and said that he was trying to help the owner or something. There was a lot of back and forth until the line went silent, and when the operator inquired as to what happened, a voice came back on and whispered that the owner was dead. Does anyone know this call? I found it on YouTube if it helps.
My PC is randomly playing this 911 audio and I don't know where it's coming from. It happened twice within the span of 2-3 hours. Anyone have an idea how this is possible? I checked all my processes running and so far nothing adds up. Hopefully I'm overlooking something.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0SXfenuscxI
leaked audio:
8:10 - Lauren Townsend killed + shots and screams by a survivor
9:19 - Kelly Flemming screaming shortly before being killed.
--- the Transcript comes from the FBI, and fills in the gaps for parts where the audio isnt released.
Few years ago I stumbled upon a 911 call on youtube. It was a man reporting a tresspaser on his property. After a while he described it as a tall, dark humanoid creature and then the creature broke into his house and call ended. I don’t remember much more but I think police found him dead/missing after they arrived.
Are 911 calls public domain? and if they are how do i listen to them? is there a website or something?
I see that parts and bits of the call and dispatch convo were released - but I'm trying to find out if there's any way that I could get my hands on the entire thing. Is that possible right now?
The study analyzed nine different police agencies in cities both large (with a population over 1 million) and smaller (with under 80,000 residents) and tracked the different kinds of calls made to the police over the year of 2016/2017. In total, around 4.3 million calls were studied.
But according to this study, mental health incidents only made up 1.3% of all the calls examined, and only 4% of those calls resulted in an officer being dispatched (though the survey did not track the actions of 911 dispatchers specifically). The largest percent of the calls were traffic-related at 16.8%. followed by “disorder” at 16.2% and “suspicion” calls—from individuals worried that a crime might happen or has happened—at 12.8%. Calls for violent incidents specifically were at 6.4%.