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    8 minutes pass before cops got sent to Powell home

    TACOMA, Wash. (AP) — Emergency call logs show that nearly eight minutes elapsed between when a social worker called 911 to report that Josh Powell's children were in danger and when sheriff's deputies were dispatched. By the time officers were on their way, the home was exploding in a gas-fueled inferno, with Powell and his two young boys inside.

    The priority of the dispatch Sunday was "routine" instead of "emergency," which cost several minutes of response time, and when the deputies arrived 14 minutes later, there was nothing they could do.

    The Associated Press obtained the logs Wednesday night under a public records request.

    Recently released audio recordings of the 911 calls raised questions about how the dispatch center handled the social worker's call regarding Powell, who was a person of interest in the disappearance of his wife two years ago.

    The worker detailed how Powell had locked her out of his house during what was supposed to be a supervised visit with his sons, that she could smell gas, and that she feared for their lives.

    Minutes later, Powell torched the home, killing himself and the boys.

    The recordings showed that the man who took the 911 call engaged in nearly seven minutes of questioning that ended with him saying he didn't know how long it would be before deputies could arrive. "We have to respond to emergency life-threatening situations first," he said.

    "I see two problems: The delay in the dispatch, and they dispatch it as a routine call," Pierce County Sheriff's Detective Ed Troyer said Wednesday night. "Had our guy been going priority, and had they dispatched it in the first three minutes, we probably could have shaved 10 minutes off our response — but there's no way we get there in time."

    The logs show that the social worker called 911 from her cellphone at 12:08 p.m., but it took her until two minutes into the call to find the address of the house. Three minutes after that, the man who took her call transferred the information to a dispatcher, who alerted two deputies about 2 1/2 minutes later, at 12:16.

    But at precisely that time, calls began pouring in to report explosions at the house about 35 miles south of Seattle — apparently from the fire blowing out windows.

    The first deputy arrived at 12:30 to find the home engulfed in flames.

    Troyer said the sheriff's office was disappointed that the initial call-taker left the impression that help wasn't immediately on the way.

    "Are we unhappy with the etiquette and the manner? Yes," Troyer said.

    He said he hoped the call center will ensure the same mistakes don't happen again.

    Recordings of the 911 call show it took more than three minutes for the operator to understand that the social worker was there to supervise a child custody visit — a factor that contributed to the dispatch delay.

    The agency that runs the call center, Law Enforcement Support Agency, said it would review the handling of the case and start a disciplinary investigation if necessary. A spokeswoman, Kris Dessen, said it was too soon to say if the response took longer than it should have.

    Powell's wife, Susan, vanished in Utah two years ago. Josh Powell has long been a person of interest in the case but maintained at the time that he had taken his boys — then 2 and 4 — on a midnight camping trip in freezing temperatures when she disappeared from their home.

    On Sunday, the social worker drove 5-year-old Braden and 7-year-old Charlie from their grandparents' home to their father's house outside Puyallup. Josh Powell lost custody of the boys last fall, after his father, with whom they then lived, was arrested in a child pornography and voyeurism investigation.

    When they arrived at the house for the regular visit, the boys ran inside the house, and Powell slammed the door in the social worker's face.

    She called her supervisor and 911, reaching the call center in Tacoma, about 10 miles away from Powell's house.

    She quickly laid out the situation:

    "Something really weird has happened. The kids went into the house and the parent — the biological parent — whose name is Josh Powell will not let me in the door. What should I do? ...

    "I could hear one of the kids crying, and he still wouldn't let me in."

    Pierce County, the second largest in the state and home to about 800,000 people, has an enhanced 911 system that is designed to give police an approximate location of a cellphone caller. It wasn't immediately clear if the call center used that feature to locate the social worker.

    While she was still looking for the address, she said, "But I think I need help right away."

    The dispatcher proceeded to question her repeatedly about who she was and her role.

    "Who is there to exercise the visitation?" he asked.

    "I am," she said. "The visit is with Josh Powell. And he's the husband of ..."

    "And who's supervising?" he asked.

    "I supervise."

    "So you supervise and you're doing the visit? You supervise yourself?" he asked.

    After getting it straight, the dispatcher told her someone would come, though he wasn't sure when.

    Moments later, the house erupted in flames.

    Josh Powell's sister, Alina Powell, called 911 about five minutes later to say she received emails from her brother explaining what to do with his property and saying he couldn't live without his sons.

    Alina Powell told a dispatcher she feared her brother was going to do something because of pressure he faced after his wife's disappearance.

    "I'm terrified to drive over there," she said, sobbing. "I'm not afraid of him. He's never hurt me. I'm afraid of seeing something I don't want to see."

     
    • Erica Moore  •  3 mths ago
      I have the fullest sympathies for dispatchers. They're overworked and understaffed at the best of times, and they hear some of the worst that can come out of humanity (people killing themselves over the phone, children hiding in closets while their crazy parents hammer on the door, a mother with a baby who isn't breathing, etc.) and there's a reason it's one of THE most stressful jobs in the country (air traffic controllers who transfer to dispatching even say it's more difficult, and they have what is technically considered the most stressful job that isn't life-threatening). They get cussed out and threatened because they can't bend the laws of space-time to make cops/paramedics/firefighters suddenly appear at the scene of an emergency. I'm usually one of the first to defend them since people tend to have NO CLUE what it is dispatchers actually do ("they just answer phones, right? psh, I wish my job was so easy.") but...

      But that dispatcher messed up bad. And I kind of hope he gets fired.
      • k 3 mths ago
        your opinion is of no value as you are a woman
      • Erica Moore 3 mths ago
        Awesome. I'll remember that so next time I don't worry about censoring what I say. No value=No need to worry about how it affects people since it won't. Yay. Freedom :)
      • cottontail 3 mths ago
        you hope he gets fired. fullest sympathy out the window behind a powell fireball
    • JD  •  3 mths ago
      I agree with others who said supervised visitation should not be in a home. It must be in a controlled enviroment. Certainly not the social worker's fault. Imagine how she feels? Dispatcher was an idiot but in the end, they never would have got there in time. Sounds like it happened within a couple of minutes of the children's arrival. so sad..
    • Mike  •  Naperville, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      Everything in this story is disgusting. The courts allowed him to have supervised visits despite being a suspect in a murder investigation. The supervisor took the kids to the house and then doesn't remember the address. The dispatcher treats a 911 call as though it's a disturbing the peace call, not a potential threatening situation. And everyone from the sheriffs office to the courts are now playing 20/20 vision as of who to blame. Newsflash: All of you are to blame for these kids death. Good luck in civil court finger pointing when the Cox family sues!!
      • k 3 mths ago
        newsflah no one cares
      • Timothy 3 mths ago
        Newsflash "K" from Milwaukee.....you're an idiot....
      • HerpDerp 3 mths ago
        Yes he is Timothy and it shows.
    • 4given  •  3 mths ago
      Powell was to undergo a psycholsexual exam and they assigned a woman to the case. He is the main suspect in the murder/disappearance of his wife, denied custody, and they kids were allowed to go to his home with a social worker, and no police escort. The system failed these kids.
    • SpaceRanger  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      If the social worker had a gun she could have shot the #$%$ through the window.
      • Rod B 3 mths ago
        hmm...natural gas filled home...shoot through window....same result.
      • Rebecca 3 mths ago
        actually it was gasoline.
    • sherzwy2008  •  3 mths ago
      She said she smelled gas and feared for their lives, that sounds pretty serious to me!
    • Art  •  3 mths ago
      There is no way anyone would have gotten there and changed the outcome. Perhaps things should have been handled differently but, if the hose "exploded" moments after the social worker got off the the phone there is no realistic way it could have been prevented.

      It makes people feel better to point the finger of blame but, he was determined to do what he did.

      Even if a swat team was on scene they would have been negotiating with him when the house went up. No one would have rushed in because doing so would be seen as potentially endangering the children.
      • Lowe 3 mths ago
        Very true, but what about the next call this dispatcher recieves and treats the same way? People who can be saved may end up dead.
      • Art 3 mths ago
        The system is what it is. Can things be improved? Absolutely! But, you have to accept that there are limitations to what can be accomplished in a given time frame.
      • Lowe 3 mths ago
        Having a person who takes calls that could mean life or death for human beings be professional and mature while taking the calls is not to much to ask. Once he got her information on the situation it should been obvious it was an emergency call and not a routine call and he should have got the police on their way and then gave her the third degree on what she was doing there and why and the birthdate of the man who owned the home etc. Really, not too much to ask!
    • driven  •  Woodburn, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      The authorities could not have gotten there fast enough even if the 911 operator had immediately called for help. Those poor little boys were murdered by a nut case. Once the gas was ignited it was too late. Powell should not be listed as Dad in any article, Dad's don't do things like that to their kids
    • Ron  •  Branson, Missouri  •  3 mths ago
      Life isn't easy for a dispatcher. I know. Once had a lady call in who was panic stricken because of an auto accident. Took at least five minutes before I could get a location. All she could think of to say was: "Hurry! Need an ambulance."
    • Bill  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      This is what happens when idiots dial 911 to complain the their burger did not have the secret sauce and the server would not give them a discount on the price. Stupid calls have conditioned the dispatchers to question the caller to avoid wasting emergency responders time. Dial 911 for true life and death emergencies and never use it to complain about nothing remotely important and then the dispatchers will respond differently. The dispatcher behaved somewhat arrogantly but I doubt that anything was going to save those two boys.
    • Alison Jones  •  3 mths ago
      We hear this kind of disturbing "emergency" 911 conversations all the time. The protocol need to be changed so dispatchers have to make sending help the first priority--not collecting data points about the situation. "Emergency" means "help needed NOW."
    • CosmoM  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      One time, I called the police about a theft on my lawn at 10:30 PM and they finally came at 2:00 AM in the morning.
    • george  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 mths ago
      If you think the police can save you you are an idiot. They come after everthing is over and write reports about what happened. Rarely do they save anyone. I am speaking from 65 years of experience. In my case they got here 20 minutes later. There would have been at least 2 dead people by the time they arrived. I was dealing with a case simular to this one and we still have the little boy and am raising him. The courts also ordered visits but I supervised the visits, not some case worker. I had my dog in the fight to save his life and after the "dad" tried to kill my wife and me so he could run off with the boy, I pulled my 45 colt and ended up giving him a lesson in screwing with a grumpy old man. I was 63 at the time. All is well the boy is safe, we have custody, the idiot is in the pen and he said he never wanted to be around me again......lesson learned. And what did the police do in this? For all you anti gun folks take note.
    • Jamie  •  3 mths ago
      so sad, because I live within 2 miles of Josh.... and theres a fire station literally less than 1/2 a mile away from us.
    • R.  •  Bethlehem, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      Write/call the Judge who clearly let those two boys die a tragic death at the hands of their Malignant Narcissist/Sociopath "father."
      Honorable Kathryn J. Nelson
      County-City Building
      930 Tacoma Avenue South, Room 334
      Tacoma, WA 98402
      253-798-7564
    • Kevin  •  Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      What judge lets a person of interest in a missing person/homocide case get supervised visits at his own home. These visits should have been held in public from the get go. As for this dispatcher, why did he need to know who was supervising who, she gave him the main information he needed, which was that the boys were in danger, she smelt gas, and the door was slammed in her face. They probably could not have been saved but maybe retraining the dispatchers and rethinking where supervised visits are being held may help the next Josh Powell like incidences.
    • Timothy  •  Weilheim in Oberbayern, Germany  •  3 mths ago
      Could have. Should have. Would have. These are the three pillars of all sensationalist retrospective articles. It is acknowledged this was a no-win scenario from the giddy-up. The alternative ending you SICKOS want to see starts with, "Hero Cop Dies In Blaze While Responding To 911 Murder/Suicide In Progress; Leaves Behind Wife And Two Children." Well, dear readers, I'd suggest you close your laptops, go out and participate in a neighborhood watch program. That might make it a little more "real" for you.
    • Erin  •  3 mths ago
      The real question is why was this psycho allowed around these children at all? And even if it were a supervised visit in another location, what would have stopped him from bringing a weapon and killing the children there. They never should have been around their father at all.
    • Breadman  •  3 mths ago
      Actually that's a pretty good time, compared to ... Chicago where the dispatch time can be from 30 minutes to never....
    • Joe  •  3 mths ago
      Ah the blame game now. Folks..start with the lame decision of that judge...I want Josh to take a mental evaluation and a lie detector test since he is the #1 suspect in the disappearance of his wife and mother of those 2 darlling kids. sure it's ok for him to have suprevised visitation rights...he's their father...OMG judge...the guy is mental and you allow him to see his kids? He's suspected in killing their mother and you allow him to see his kids? Hey...if the cops arrived withing seconds...how could they have prevented this killer from not blowing up his house? Blame game starts and ends with the court system that believes daddy's have a right to see their kids...after they are suspected in killing their mom and being more than a little off in the mental department...end of story..bury the kids...and find the remains of their mom soon.
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