truesee's Blog

Weird 911 calls

911 calls can cross line into wackiness

Drunken dialing, mental confusion, can prompt frivolous calls

911 call center Boynton Beach 911 Communications Supervisor Brian McNevin monitors 911 calls and police and fire department dispatching from his communication terminal. (MARK RANDALL, Sun entinel / September 8, 2010)

 

Robert Nolin, Sun Sentinel 3:21 p.m. EDT, September 23, 2010

 

The voice, gravelly and slightly slurred, came over the 911 line.

"I want to talk to somebody in drug enforcement," it demanded. "This woman, she took my booze from me. She took my bottle of booze and I want it back."

For more than 20 minutes, Ronald Ernest Jones, 60, of Pompano Beach, badgered emergency dispatchers over a claim his landlady had stolen his liquor.

In Delray Beach, Benjamin Dewer, 26, twice called 911 in the early morning hours. "I need a ride and I am hungry," he told dispatchers.

Both cases resulted in arrests for abuse of an emergency line, a first-degree misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine. They also represent a perpetual problem that can stem from loneliness, mental confusion, anger or drunken dialing: Sad and wacky calls from folks who risk arrest by dialing 911 when they don't have an emergency.

Such calls may annoy dispatchers, but they are only a small portion of the 240 million 911 calls received nationally each year. The Broward Sheriff's Office fields 2.5 million 911 calls annually, half of those non-emergency ones. In Palm Beach County, the Sheriff's Office handles about 1 million calls a year, and 30 percent to 40 percent are non-emergency ones.

Of those non-emergency calls, officials say, harassing or troublesome calls are a small percentage.

"We do have the frivolous 911 calls: 'I can't find my remote control.' 'Can you tell me when the electricity's going to come back on?' " said Robin Schmidt, communications manager for the Palm Beach Count Sheriff's Office. "Some people just get confused. A lot of them, they are either intoxicated or on drugs."

Others just don't seem to understand the concept of 911: call only in case of emergency. Like the woman who last year called three times to complain a Fort Pierce McDonald's had run out of Chicken McNuggets. Or the St. Petersburg men who called multiple times, one seeking someone to have sex with him, the other complaining his mom had taken his beer away.

All three were arrested, but that only happens in extreme cases of 911 abuse.

"We generally try to educate people and inform them that their call is not an emergency," said Jim Leljedal, spokesman for the Broward Sheriff's Office. "It's when we have these outrageous abuses that you have to take action."

For Broward dispatchers, who handle 22 cities and 17 fire departments, many of the oddball calls come from kids.

"We get those every day, when kids pick up the phone and dial 911 just on a dare or to see what happens," Leljedal said. "What happens is they get a lecture from a deputy."

Many non-emergency calls are innocent misuse, rather than abuse, of the system.

"You get people who call and ask what time it is. Lonely old people want conversation," said Kim Rubio, Broward Sheriff's Office communications manager. "Sometimes you get cuckoo birds that call you all the time and make all sorts of false claims."

Dispatchers use discretion and a case-by-case assessment. Usually they will gently inform the caller that 911 is reserved for emergencies and direct them to a non-emergency line.

"You will have mental conditions in people that cause them to call 911," Rick Jones, operation issues director for the National Emergency Number Association, said from his Rockford, Ill., office. "Others misuse or just repeatedly call it."

When that happens, dispatchers often will assign an officer to investigate. "If they're calling more than two or three times we'll send somebody out there," said Rubio.

Officers typically will impress upon the caller that it's illegal to dial 911 capriciously. If the caller still persists, an arrest is imminent.

"Those should be prosecuted to the fullest extent," said Stephen O'Conor, president of the emergency number association and assistant communications manager for West Palm Beach police. "There is a possibility that they could jeopardize others" by tying up 911 lines.

Emergency lines usually are sufficient enough to capture all incoming calls, even if one dispatcher is busy dealing with a junk call. The strain on the system can come when officers' time is spent dealing with a troublesome caller rather than more important matters.

Curiously, many people, often the elderly, won't call 911 when they should, fearful of monopolizing an emergency line. "A lot of these people that have true emergencies are spending time looking up the non-emergency number," Rubio said.

Other times folks will call about a perceived emergency, such as the older woman who wanted paramedics to help uncap her pill bottle. But what constitutes a true emergency can be subjective, and dispatchers must err on the side of caution.

"For an elderly person living alone, a lot of little things could be an emergency," Leljedal said. "If an elderly woman living alone can't open her own medicine bottle, there's probably a need there for social services."

As long as folks drink, and as long as 911 remains easy to access, emergency professionals say, crank calls will be dialed in. But it's all part of the system.

"The good that we do certainly outweighs the inconvenience of having to respond to nonessential calls," O'Conor said. "You have to take the bad with the good."
LINK TO TOP 911 CALLS AND PHOTOS
Entry #3,254

Those born on September 27th

   September 27th people are taken up with the puzzling and paradoxical nature of life. At first glance they would seem to be outgoing and generally normal enough, but the deeper one digs into their personalities the more hidden foibles one uncovers.

     September 27th people usually function very well in real terms or in the eyes of others but may nonetheless be plagued by doubts or insecurities. perhaps this comes as a result of experiencing too much of themselves and in their quest for perfection they have a tendency to act like a hero or martyr but may grow depressed over their inability to completely live up to the impossibility of the high goals they have set. If those born on this day could lower their standards a bit, or be more accepting of their human failings, they would indeed be much happier, but perhaps less exceptional.

   Those born on this day generally possess great versatility and enjoy exploring all aspects of their work and related pursuits. They are highly appreciative by nature and like to be appreciated themselves. Hard workers, they operate well under pressure and usually possess a large measure of professional cool. Too often this detachment which they practice never ending in their professional life becomes an obstruction to their private life.

   Those born on the 27th of the month are ruled by the number 9(2+7=9 and they have the ability to influence those around them.

Advice: Try not to withdraw into your shell so much, learn to be more trusting and accepting. Have faith in your natural abilities. We all make mistakes that’s why we are human. What are you afraid of? Happiness is available, even for you, too if you can stand it.

Weaknesses: Oversensitive, insecure and withdrawn

Born on This Day:   Samuel Adams, Mike Schmidt, William Conrad and Red Rodney

Famous Inventions: 1977 Anacleto Montero Sanchez received a patent for a hypodermic syringe.

This Day in History: Sep 27, 1779: John Adams appointed to negotiate peace terms with British

On this day in 1779, the Continental Congress appoints John Adams to travel to France as minister plenipotentiary in charge of negotiating treaties of peace and commerce with Great Britain during the Revolutionary War.

Entry #3,253

$93,000 drug sparks debate

Monday, September 27, 2010
 

$93,000 drug sparks debate

 

The treatment adds 4 months' survival, on average, for men who have incurable prostate tumors.

MARILYNN MARCHIONE

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bob Svensson, 80, is hooked up to a blood infusion machine under the care of nurse Nancy Grant at the American Red Cross in Dedham, Mass., as he undergoes a $93,000 prostate cancer treatment. Svensson is honest about why he got it insurance paid. "I would not spend that money," because the benefit doesn't seem worth it.

 

Photo by: Elise Amendola Bob Svensson, 80, is hooked up to a blood infusion machine under the care of nurse Nancy Grant at the American Red Cross in Dedham, Mass., as he undergoes a $93,000 prostate cancer treatment. Svensson is honest about why he got it insurance paid. "I would not spend that money," because the benefit doesn't seem worth it.

BOSTON -- Cancer patients, brace yourselves. Many new drug treatments cost nearly $100,000 per year, sparking fresh debate about how much a few months more of life are worth.

The latest is Provenge, a first-of-a-kind therapy approved in April. It costs $93,000 per year and adds four months' survival, on average, for men with incurable prostate tumors.

Bob Svensson is honest about why he got it -- insurance paid.

"I would not spend that money," because the benefit doesn't seem worth it, says Svensson, 80, a former corporate finance officer from Bedford, Mass.

His supplemental Medicare plan is paying while the government decides whether basic Medicare will cover Provenge and for whom. The tab for taxpayers could be huge -- prostate is the most common cancer in American men. Most of those who have it will be eligible for Medicare, and Provenge will be an option for many late-stage cases. A meeting to consider Medicare coverage is set for Nov. 17.

For the past decade, new cancer-fighting drugs have been topping $5,000 per month. Only a few of these keep cancer in remission so long that they are,

need help?

Even as new cancer treatments offer hope for some, their cost is out of reach for many.

Here is a list of places from which to seek help:

* Genentech: www.Genentech AccessSolutions.com

* Novartis: http://www. patientassistancenow.com

* Patient Advocate Foundation, 800-532-5274 www.patientadvocate.org

* CancerCare, 866-552-6729 www.cancercarecopay.org

* Chronic Disease Fund, 877-968-7233 www.cdfund.org

* Healthwell Foundation, 800-675-8416 www.healthwellfoundation.org

* Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, 877-557-2672 www.LLS.org/copay

* National Organization for Rare Disorders 800-999-6673 www.rarediseases.org

* Patient Access Network Foundation, 866-316-7263 www.panfoundation.org

* Patient Advocate Foundation, 866-512-3861 www.copays.org

* Patient Services Inc., 800-366-7741 www. patientservicesinc.org

in effect, cures. For most people, the drugs may buy a few months or years. Insurers usually pay if Medicare pays. But some people have lifetime caps and more people are uninsured because of job layoffs in the recession.

 

Unlike drugs that people can try for a month or two and keep using only if they keep responding, Provenge is an all-or-nothing $93,000 gamble. It's a one-time treatment to train the immune system to fight prostate tumors, the first so-called cancer vaccine. Part of why it costs so much is that it's not a pill cranked out in a lab, but a treatment that is individually prepared, using each patient's cells and a protein found on most prostate cancer cells.

When is a drug considered cost-effective?

The most widely quoted figure is $50,000 for a year of life, "though it has been that for decades -- never really adjusted -- and not written in stone," said Dr. Harlan Krumholz, a Yale University expert on health care costs.

Many cancer drugs are way over that mark. Estimates of the cost of a year of life gained for lung cancer patients on Erbitux range from $300,000 to as much as $800,000, said Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, the American Cancer Society's deputy chief medical officer.

Higher costs seem to be more accepted for cancer treatment than for other illnesses, but there's no rule on how much is too much, he said.

Entry #3,252

Those born on September 26th

     Those born on September 26th are perfectionists who know that there is only one way to get something right by doing it over and over again. Like the man who was asked the way to Carnegie Hall and replied, practice these are indeed people who believe that practice makes perfect. Technically oriented, striving to perfect the art of their craft, they know how to achieve their goals, but also have a gift for teaching others. If not by precept then by example. They can be a tremendous inspiration to those who admire them.

     Characteristically, September 26th people put their faith in logic and value its application in everyday life. They also feel that few technical problems in their field cannot be solved through the application of rational principles. September 26th people tend to be complex personalities, somewhat difficult to fathom. ( )

     Most September 26 people have a wonderful sense of humor, but one that can be overlooked, due to its subtle irony.  They are intense, well directed and hard driving. They are ruled by the number          8(2 +6=8)

   Those ruled by the number 8 build their careers slowly and carefully, this is also true for finances and personal affairs. They are warm hearted people.

Advice:  let up a bit in your intensity it can really put others off. Be the student as well as the teacher. Sometimes mistakes are necessary, perfection may not be the highest goal. Develop a more relaxed side. Occasionally allow yourself to vegetate.

Strengths:Technical, influential and persistent

Weaknesses:  Obsessive, compulsive and secretive

Born on This Day:  George Gershwin, Martin Heidegger, Olivia Newton John and Lynn Anderson

Famous Inventions:  1961 Patent for an aerial capsule (satellite) emergency separation device was obtained by Maxime Faget and Andre Meyer.

This Day In History:  Sep 26, 1960: First Kennedy-Nixon debate

For the first time in U.S. history, a debate between major party presidential candidates is shown on television. The presidential hopefuls, John F. Kennedy, a Democratic senator of Massachusetts, and Richard M. Nixon, the vice president of the United States, met in a Chicago studio to discuss U.S. domestic matters.

Entry #3,250

Tot fatally injured 'over his ABCs'

Tot killed 'over his ABCs' in B'klyn

LARRY CELONA, JOE WALKER and SABRINA FORD

Last Updated: 8:00 AM, September 26, 2010

Posted: 2:43 AM, September 26, 2010

 

A Brooklyn toddler who had trouble reciting his ABCs was pummeled to death by his mother's "abusive" boyfriend in an attack so horrific it left the walls spattered with blood, police sources said.

Aiyden Davis, who would have turned 3 next month, had previously been beaten by his mother, Theresa Davis, 27, who whipped him with a belt, the sources said.

She and her boyfriend, Reggie Williams, 31, allegedly told cops they would hit the boy if he acted up, cried or wouldn't eat.

The tot, who had old and new bruises on his face, legs and back, died of blunt impact injuries to his head, torso and extremities around 10:30 p.m. Friday, shortly after he was found battered in his Bedford-Stuyvesant apartment. He also had a lacerated liver and internal bleeding.

Theodore Parisienne

INNOCENT VICTIM: A day after the death of Aiyden Davis, 2, his devastated aunt, Pamela, is comforted in Brooklyn.

"He was very lovable," said Aiyden's devastated aunt, Pamela Davis. "I'm looking at all his toys, his scooter, he was very loved."

Williams was charged with murder in Friday's attack. Theresa Davis was charged with assault, endangering the welfare of a child and weapons possession for the prior assaults, the sources said.

Williams was trusted to baby-sit Aiyden for the first time Friday -- and allegedly became violent with the boy just because he had trouble reciting the alphabet.

"He was like, 'I just spanked him because he was messing up his ABCs,' " said Pamela, 44, recalling the second of three check-up calls she made at 6:45 p.m.

Pamela, who usually watched the boy while his mother worked as a security guard, was worried because "I didn't hear him in the background.

"Normally, he's yelling, 'Auntie!' because he wants to get on the phone with me."

When she called again at 8:45 p.m., Williams -- known on the streets at "Reggie 101" -- mysteriously blubbered: "I'm so sorry, P., I'm so sorry," but gave no reason for the apology.

"Now I understand why he was saying that," said the devastated aunt.

"I hope they give him life," she said of Williams. "I'm going to be in court every time they tell me he's in court."

Pamela Davis, who lives in Harlem, said Aiyden told her last weekend: "Reggie hit me and mama." Theresa Davis denied it.

"I would ask, 'Is he abusing you?' And she would say, 'No, no, everything's fine,' " Pamela said. "She didn't want to face the truth.

"It's my fault -- I should have made her bring him to me," she said. "I didn't baby-sit him one day in two years, and now he's dead."

Aiyden was found breathing but "not responsive" at 9:50 p.m., when a man called 911 asking for help, police said. The child was throwing up when EMS arrived, the sources said.

Crime-scene investigators spent yesterday combing through the apartment, where Williams had just moved in.

A neighbor said she frequently heard Williams yelling at the boy.

"He was always screaming at him and cursing," said neighbor Nikcole Palmer, 34. "He was bad news."

Davis said her niece had a clean record and had previously spent about a year in a battered-woman's shelter.

An Administration for Children's Services spokesman said Theresa Davis had no history with the agency. 

 

LINK TO  PHOTO: http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/brooklyn/tot_killed_over_his_abcs_in_klyn_FXXz1KC1ujogRT2TJPyhqK#ixzz10gZEKusF

Entry #3,248

'Pulpit Freedom Sunday' to Defy IRS

'Pulpit Freedom Sunday' to Defy IRS

Pastors Across the U.S. Say They Will Defy Law and Talk Politics

 

By KEVIN DOLAK
Sept. 25, 2010

 

Nearly 100 pastors across the country planned to take part in Pulpit Freedom Sunday, an in-your-face challenge Sunday to what the government says can and cannot be said in church.

 

 

Tennessee Pastors Prepare to Break Federal Law Sunday
This Sunday, 100 U.S. pastors, including seven from Tennessee, will stand before their congregations and break the law, on purpose.
(Image Source/Getty Images)

 

The pastors, along with the Scottsdale, Ariz.-based nonprofit Alliance Defense Fund, are reacting to a law stating that churches are not allowed to support politicians from the pulpit, according to the ADF.

The growing trend is a challenge to the IRS from the churches, and may jeopardize their all-important tax-exempt status. But some pastors and church leaders said they are willing to defy the law to defending their right to freedom of speech.

Federal tax law, established in 1954, prohibits churches and tax exempt entities from endorsing or opposing political candidates.

Entry #3,244

Those born on September 25th

     Those born on September 25th lie in a curious relationship with their society. On the one hand they are dependent on it for sustenance, and ultimately their success. On the other hand they are often openly critical of it and capable or ironically exposing its faults. In doing so they may actually show how the social fabric around them can be improved thus their apparent negativity or probing evaluations can lead to positive results.

     Oddly enough, outside of their local sphere, those born on this day may be seen as living symbols of the area from which they come, so closely are identified with it in the minds of others. Yet no one will be more keenly aware and critical of their neighborhood, town, city, state or country than they. Their relations, then, with the home place is interestingly symbiotic, a kind of sharing that can be at once advantageous and disadvantageous for both parties.

     September 25th people are imaginative but at the same time very precise and exacting. Perfectionists, they generally go over their work repeatedly in order to catch mistakes and shore up weaknesses. The demands they make on others are no different from what they ask of themselves. Interestingly enough, although they so often indulge in criticism of their social group they do not react well to the criticism of that group my outsiders; in fact they can become defensive at times.

     Those born on the 25th day of the month is ruled by the number 7 (2+5=7) and enjoy change and travel but they generally prefer staying closer to home.

Advice: Your tendency to be share or critical get you in trouble. Remember that words can hurt worse than blows. Try to be open about what you are feeling. Don’t count yourself off from life.

Strengths: Hard working, goal oriented and determined.

Weaknesses: Closed, insensitive and unforgiving

Born on This Day: William Faulkner, Michael Douglas, Luke Skywalker and Bob McAdoo

Famous Inventions:  1959 The song "Do-Re-Mi" from the "Sound of Music" by Rodger and Hammerstein was registered.
1956 The first transatlantic telephone cable went into operation.

This Day in History: Sep 25, 1957 Central High School integrated

Under escort from the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division, nine black students enter all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas. Three weeks earlier, Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus had surrounded the school with National Guard troops to prevent its federal court-ordered racial integration. After a tense standoff, President Dwight D. Eisenhower federalized the Arkansas National Guard and sent 1,000 army paratroopers to Little Rock to enforce the court order.

Entry #3,242

President Obama blasts the GOP's 'Pledge to America' as a 'worn-out philosophy'

President Obama blasts the GOP's 'Pledge to America' as a 'worn-out philosophy'

 

Sean Alfano
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

 

Saturday, September 25th 2010, 9:46 AM

President Barack Obama isn't impressed by the GOP's "Pledge to America" plan which was unveiled by House Republican Leader John Boehner (below) on Thursday.

PoolPresident Barack Obama isn't impressed by the GOP's "Pledge to America" plan which was unveile by House Republican Leader John Boehner (below) on Thursday.

 

SAUL LOEB

to America" Saturday as nothing but a plan to continue "disastrous" policies of the George W. Bush administration.

The pledge, which Republicans unveiled Thursday, aims to slash government spending and cut taxes, as well as repeal Obama's health care overhaul and economic stimulus program.

The pledge is "an echo of a disastrous decade we can't afford to relive," Obama said in his weekly Internet address.

"It is grounded in same worn-out philosophy: cut taxes for millionaires and billionaires; cut the rules for Wall Street and the special interests; and cut the middle class loose to fend for itself. That's not a prescription for a better future," Obama said.

Late Thursday, Senate Democrats delayed a vote on whether to extend Bush-era tax cuts or let them expire at the end of the year until after November's midterm elections.

Both Democrats and Republicans blamed each other for the political gridlock ahead of the pivotal election in which the GOP is expected to make major gains in both the House and Senate.

The plan's timing is reminiscent of the "Contract with America," which the GOP rolled out just weeks before 1994 midterm elections where the party took control of the House and held power until 2006.

In response to Obama's comments, Republicans shot back, calling their plan a "new agenda."

"It offers a new way forward that hasn't been tried in Washington - an approach focused on cutting spending - which is sadly a new idea for a Congress accustomed to always accelerating it," Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2010/09/25/2010-09-25_president_obama_blasts_the_gops_pledge_to_america_as_a_wornout_philosophy.html#ixzz10Z3X6YI1

Entry #3,241

Mom arrested after taping daughter's fight

Florida mom, April Newcomb, arrested after egging on teen daughter's catfight: SHOCKING VIDEO

Aliyah Shahid
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Friday, September 24th 2010, 12:35 PM

April Newcomb, 39, was arrested in Florida after she was caught on video egging on her daughter to fight another student in Palmetto. HOApril Newcomb, 39, was arrested in Florida after she was caught on video egging on her daughter to fight another student in Palmetto.

Mama said, knock you out.

The mother of a Florida teen was arrested and charged with child abuse after she egged on her daughter to fight another student in front of a cheering audience.

April Newcomb, 39, was arrested by the Manatee County Sheriff's Office on Wednesday after someone in the crowd posted a video of the catfight on YouTube, said Dave Bristow, a spokesman from the sheriff's office, to the Daily News.

During the fight, which seemed to be planned, Newcomb is seen in a crowd of spectators last Friday. She is heard yelling at her daughter, "Don't f------ stop!"

"It's very disturbing," Bristow said. "You just shake your head and say, ‘Really, this happened?'"

"We've all seen videos of kids fighting, but to have a parent there, that's what pushed us over the edge. She egged on her daughter, did nothing to stop it."

Bristow said the dispute was over an old boyfriend.

In a police report, Newcomb said, "We were both wrong and I understand that," referring to herself and her daughter. "And I understand where y'all are coming from. I think, unfortunately, it was going to happen no matter what."

Newcomb will face up to five years behind bars.

 

CHECK OUT THE SHOCKING VIDEO:

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid35214809001?bctid=615575432001

Entry #3,240