Ohio teen makes frantic 911 calls as he is crushed to death in a minivan
When Kyle Plush called 911, he knew his situation was dire.
The 16-year-old sophomore did not tell the authorities what had happened to him when he apparently used an automated assistant on his smartphone to make the call Tuesday outside Seven Hills School in Cincinnati. He said only that he was trapped in his minivan and could not hear them - no doubt hoping they could still hear his cries for help.
"Help, help, help, help," he told the dispatcher, according to 911 audio obtained by The Washington Post. Then he let out a scream: "Help!"
The teen, who seemed to be laboring to breathe, repeatedly asked for the police - briefly pausing between each word to try to catch his breath.
The dispatcher repeatedly asked the teen where they could find him.
"I can't hear you," the teen said. Distant banging could be heard in the background. "I'm in desperate need of help. … I'm going to die here."
"Help -" he said once more, and then the call abruptly ended.
Five minutes later, at 3:21 p.m., police responded and searched the area near the private school on Red Bank Road but did not see the teen, according to a statement from the Cincinnati Police Department.
In a conversation between the dispatcher and a deputy, the dispatcher said that it had been difficult to hear the teen, saying he sounded "kind of far away from the phone." The dispatcher said she could hear banging in the background and someone saying, "Help, help, I'm stuck." The authorities then discussed whether the 911 call might have been a prank.
Nearly six hours later, Kyle's father found him unresponsive in the vehicle, police said. First responders rushed to the scene but could not revive the teen, and he was later pronounced dead.
"Horrific, horrific situation to come across as a parent," Cincinnati Police spokesman Lt. Steve Saunders said Thursday in a phone interview.
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported that a law enforcement source it did not name told the newspaper that the teen had climbed onto the rear bench seat in family's Honda Odyssey minivan. The teen was trying to reach his tennis equipment, according to the newspaper, when the seat "flipped up and over toward the back hatch, pinning him upside down beneath the seat."
The Hamilton County Coroner's Office said in a statement that preliminary autopsy results showed that Kyle died of "asphyxia due to chest compression."
"This was a horrific tragedy. What I say is that we share in their heartbreak around this," Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac said during an afternoon news conference. "Police officers, firefighters and even our emergency dispatch personnel - you get into this because you want to help. Something went wrong here and we need to find out why we weren't able to provide that help that we hoped we could have."
Cincinnati police as well as the Hamilton County prosecutor's office have launched investigations to try to determine what went wrong - both inside the van and at the 911 call center.
"Our hearts are heavy this week as we mourn the tragic loss of a child, 16-year old Kyle Plush, Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley, D, said in a statement Thursday. "I ask that our City join me in praying for the Plush family, Ron, Jill and Ali during this very difficult time."
The mayor called the circumstances surrounding Kyle's death "devastating" and said they "raise concerning questions about our City's emergency 911 system and police response. While it is unclear if there is wrongdoing by the city in this tragedy, we have a profound responsibility to find out."
He added:
"We owe the Plush family and the public a detailed and comprehensive explanation of everything that has been done, recommendations made and actions taken at the 911 center that could have had any bearing on the practices that may have contributed to this tragedy. We must also be made aware if preventable flaws or failures have worsened emergency situations. As elected officials, we need to be involved directly in evaluating all available information and insist the proper solutions be adopted."
After Kyle's frantic call for help Tuesday afternoon, a dispatcher tried to call him back - but the teen, who was apparently trapped inside his vehicle, was not able to answer his phone.
As heard in the 911 audio, the teen's phone rang and rang, then the call went to his voice mail: "Hello, this is Kyle. I'm not available right now. I'll get back to you as soon as I can."
Then, at some point, Kyle called the police a second time.
During that call, which lasted several minutes, he sounded weaker and something could be heard creaking in the background as the teen took breaths. The teen told the dispatcher to pass along a message for him after he died.
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