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    911 log shows time lapse in Powell emergency call

    TACOMA, Wash. (AP) — 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, emergency call logs show. The home was a gas-fueled inferno - with Powell and his two young boys inside - by the time officers were on their way.

    Several minutes of response time was lost when the priority of the dispatch Sunday was listed as "routine" instead of "emergency." There was nothing deputies could do when they arrived 14 minutes later.

    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. "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 two minutes into the call to find the home's address. Three minutes later, the man who took her call transferred the information to a dispatcher, who alerted two deputies about 2½ minutes later, at 12:16.

    At precisely that time, calls poured in reporting 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 operator 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 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 had 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 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 from the 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 with about 800,000 people, has an enhanced 911 system 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 looking for the address, she said, "But I think I need help right away."

    The dispatcher then questioned her repeatedly about who she was and her role: "Who is there to exercise the visitation?"

    "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. She 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."

    ___

    Johnson reported from Seattle.

     
    • G. Dale  •  Chattanooga, Tennessee  •  3 mths ago
      Anything to do with Powell should have been red flagged for immediate response
      • Wise Guy 3 mths ago
        Who's Powell? I've never heard of him until now. Nobody predicted this and the kids would be dead even if the police had been sent immediately.
      • John 3 mths ago
        Yes Powell should have been flagged. However it took along time for the CPS worker to say who she was and where she was.
    • BLKFEM888  •  3 mths ago
      I have a suggestion. Personnel like social workers and others should have a special code that they can give to dispatchers so they will know it's an emergency situation and not a routine call. This way they won't sit on the phone trying to figure out if the poor cat is stuck up a tree and the owner thinks it's an emergency. Simple solution, so why don't they give these to people that really do need them. Police can call for backup using codes...
      • just me 3 mths ago
        I never thought of that. That is actually a great idea!
      • Lorrianne H 3 mths ago
        That is a very intelligent idea.
      • Perfect Stranger 3 mths ago
        Hooper, you're right on!
    • lonster  •  3 mths ago
      I don't think the faster response time would've mattered considering this douchebag used a hatchet on his kids before setting the house on fire.
    • Tiger  •  3 mths ago
      Imagine the horror of those two little boys as their dad pulls them into their home, pulls out an axe and starts striking them, then douses them with gasoline, before torching the house. All this going on while a call center employee utilizes his enormous ego to be judge of what is and isn't an emergency. I hope he thinks about his actions every day....
      • Nunya 3 mths ago
        Yes... while in the unemployment line !
      • panama126 3 mths ago
        autopsy not even done yet lol wonder where the axe comment comes from
    • dan  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      had to dial 1 for english and so on
    • John  •  Spotswood, New Jersey  •  3 mths ago
      Obviously the judge who permitted the visitation is as ignorant as this dispather.
      • Robert 3 mths ago
        The judge was REQUIRED to PERMIT the visitation, so you're wrong on that.
        However, the LOCATION and methods of security should have been different....
        obviously.
    • Rhonda  •  Roanoke, Virginia  •  3 mths ago
      Had I been the 911 operator, not only would I have immediately dispatched police (child involved), but I would also have sent the fire department (smelled gas)! How stupid was this dispatcher. They will probably say they get lots of crank calls. Better dispatch to a crank call, then have this kind of tragedy on your hands!
    • deb  •  3 mths ago
      Any supervised visits should have taken place in a neutral "facility". And to have a lone female take the children, to supervise with him, was a completely wrong decision, unless she was armed and capable of using her defensive weapon. The system failed these children. Now, hopefully, they are with their Mom...in heaven.
    • Fry  •  3 mths ago
      That dispatcher is an arrogant #$%$ His job is to send help immediately, not play "20 questions" for 7 minutes with the panicked caller. He needs to be removed from his job.
    • Michael  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      I've only had to call 911 once regarding a serious auto accident. The questions from the 911 dispatcher were more about me than the accident where people were obviously injured. Anyone else had the same experience?
    • Mike  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  3 mths ago
      Beware media's "smoke and mirrors" treatment of this story. They are drawing your attention away from the real culprits in this tragedy: the judge who ordered this visitation and a system that allows a suspected murderer any contact with two prime witnesses against him. "Look at the bad 911 dispatcher and the helpless social worker" they say. "Don't look at the ones who are really to blame. Don't think about the real cause of these children's deaths." These two boys should have never been taken to their murdering father, period!
    • ex nihil  •  Capitol Heights, Maryland  •  3 mths ago
      it wouldnt have mattered how fast "dispatch" had responded. when was the last time you saw police do anything other than put yellow tape around a crime scene?! (with the rare exception of slow moving hostage situations involving swat). they simply cant BE there
    • Dr. Zook  •  3 mths ago
      The article states that part of the conversation with the 911 operator was as follows:

      The dispatcher then questioned her repeatedly about who she was and her role: "Who is there to exercise the visitation?"
      "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.

      Okay, this 911 operator needs to be better trained to ask more precise questions. In the context of the conversation the question "And who's supervising?" sounds to me like he is asking "Who is supervising the children's visit with the father?" when what he meant to ask the social worker was "Who is your supervisor?"

      I don't think it would have made a difference if the cops or fire brigade had arrived 1 minute after the gas explosion. Fires advance quickly, especially when a gaseous accelerant is present, so anyone who was in that house was probably dead before the 911 call was completed. However in other situations a delay of minutes in defining the situation could mean the difference between life and death.
    • Patty  •  3 mths ago
      In future, several things should be done to fix this. 1) I think the system needs to make clear that a situation of this type requires an "emergency" coded response - and police officers need to respond very quickly. I do believe the dispatcher played a bit of a run around game - being sarcastic at times with the responses from the social worker. Then responding that they needed to respond to emergency and life-threatening situations first was about as wrong as you could get in light of the outcome. 2) All social workers who are supervising visits with parents should have an emergency script that they keep with them. BEFORE taking the children, they note the address on the document. The minute a parent does something like this, they call 911 and state very clearly what the situation is. She should have told the dispatcher to shut up and listen (he kept interrupting and asking STUPID questions instead of ones that could clarify the emergency). The social worker with a script could have been more direct - the father is accused of murdering his wife, unstable, has taken children, I smell gasoline, clearly a life threatening situation. Time was of the essence, and the failure really rests primarily here on the cowardly father. But we can do things to try to prevent this from happening again.
    • Calamity Jane  •  3 mths ago
      8 minutes seem like a good response time to me. Obviously too late for these boys but I think 2 minutes would have been too late.
    • Bald Bull  •  Austin, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      "I could hear one of the kids crying".......because he had just seen his dad hit his brother with a hatchet. Sick Sick Sick. I wish I could see this guy burning in Hell
    • JoAnne  •  3 mths ago
      first, he took a hatchet to the kids second, them blew themselves up. i'm no brainiac but exactly what could have been done to save them?????
    • Belinda  •  3 mths ago
      When you hear there are children involved you don't hesitate, you send help immediately.
    • Leslie  •  3 mths ago
      There's no way anybody could have prevented this, however, the dispatcher sounds like an idiot.
    • Clyde  •  West Fork, Arkansas  •  3 mths ago
      The response time could have been 30 seconds, it was already to late. The dispatchers response to the 911 call was outrageous. One does not expect a third world response to a rerquest for assistance from another government agency that is on the scene. That being said, the criminal justice system and social services failed these kids from the get go.
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