[Vision2020] seattletimes.com: Oregon woman arrested after calling 911 to ask return of "cute" deputy

Bill London london at moscow.com
Sat Jul 15 12:29:52 PDT 2006


P-
Your anecdote about the modem dialing 911 happened to me as well....In the
days before getting a wireless connection, we had a second phone line hooked
directly to my computer modem.
The modem malfunctioned and dialed a series of numbers including 911.  One
evening, yes, we were visited by 2 Moscow police.  We talked at the front
door and they explained that they got the wordless 911 call from my second
line, so I was able to explain that problem.
We dumped the modem soon thereafter.
BL


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Paul Rumelhart" <godshatter at yahoo.com>
To: <vision2020 at moscow.com>
Sent: Saturday, July 15, 2006 9:26 AM
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] seattletimes.com: Oregon woman arrested after
calling 911 to ask return of "cute" deputy


> Joe,
>
> Wouldn't that tend to turn 911 into a call-routing system?  I don't
> particulary want to wait while I'm bleeding to death for the eight
> people in front of  me to be routed to their ultimate destination.
>
> That number is for *emergencies*.  You know, people being attacked,
> dying, in need of medical help right now, etc?  I see nothing wrong with
> arresting someone for treating it like it was a dating service.  I'm
> also sure that if that policeman was the only one available and the
> choice was arrest an intruder or go arrest that lady, he'd have gotten
> to her after the intruder was taken care of.
>
> Paul
>
> As an aside, I remember hearing about someone years ago who was trying
> to configure their modem in their office to dial an outside line and
> then the number.  Instead of dialing 9, 1, and then the number they were
> repeatedly dialing 9, 9, 1, 1, and then the number and then hanging up
> when there was no connection from a modem on the other end and trying a
> different configuration.  They ended up making many calls to 911 that
> lasted for a few seconds each.  The police (wherever they were, I don't
> remember - it might have been here) busted in like they were a SWAT
> team.  I don't remember if they got arrested - I doubt it since it
> wasn't intentional - but you never know.
>
> Joe Campbell wrote:
>
> >Here is what is particularly funny about this story, Carl: If you call
911 for a non-emergency reason, they will send out a police officer to
arrest you since you are "taking up valuable time from dispatchers who could
be taking true emergency calls." The fact that the police officer is taking
the time to arrest someone for making a phone call is apparently not "taking
up valuable time" from officer, though. Wouldn't it be easier if they had
just given the woman the non-emergency number?
> >
> >--
> >Joe Campbell
> >
> >---- carlwestberg846 at hotmail.com wrote:
> >
> >=============
> >This message was sent to you by carlwestberg846 at hotmail.com,
> >as a service of The Seattle Times (http://www.seattletimes.com).
> >
> >Comments from sender: This is just too funny not to share.
> >----------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> >Oregon woman arrested after calling 911 to ask return of "cute" deputy
> >Full story:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003127178_webcutearrest14.html
> >
> >
> >The Associated Press
> >
> >
> >
> > ALOHA, Ore.&#8211; A woman who called 911 to ask for the return of
sheriff's deputy she found attractive got something she found a lot less
attractive -- a date in court for misuse of the emergency dispatch system.
> >
> > Washington County sheriff's Sgt. David Thompson told KGW Television of
Portland the situation developed after a noise complaint last month by
neighbors of Lorna Jeanne Dudash. Checking on the complaint, a deputy
knocked on her door, then left.
> >
> > Thompson said Dudash then called 911, asking that the "cutie pie" deputy
return.
> >
> > "He's the cutest cop I've seen in a long time. I just want to know his
name," Dudash told the dispatcher. "Heck, it doesn't come very often a good
man comes to your doorstep."
> >
> > After listening to some more, followed by a bit of silence, the
dispatcher asked repeatedly why Dudash needed the deputy to return.
> >
> > "Honey, I'm just going to be honest with you, OK? I just thought he was
cute. I'm 45 years old and I'd just like to meet him again, but I don't know
how to go about doing that without calling 911," she said.
> >
> > "I know this is absolutely not in any way, shape or form an emergency,
but if you would give the officer my phone number and ask him to come back
would you mind?"
> >
> > The deputy returned, verified that there was no emergency and arrested
her for misusing the 911 system, an offense punishable by a fine of up to
several thousand dollars and a year in jail.
> >
> > Thompson said it was the first case he knew of in which someone called
the emergency line for such a personal reason.
> >
> > "That's taking up valuable time from dispatchers who could be taking
true emergency calls," he said. "Apparently she didn't know how to look up
the non-emergency number."
> >
> >
> >
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