911 call from nursing facility with no voices, Baltimore MD


A 911 call was received from a nursing facility near Melrose Ave in Baltimore. There were no voices on the call, and staff could not identify which patient or area the call came from. The situation is being investigated as a possible behavioral or mental health crisis.
Audio|Source: Baltimore City Police Northern District
01:30
Transcript:
00:00
Yeah, 24, I'm coming 10-2-3 on that, um,
00:03
first of the call.
00:07
For, um, Ben, can we get, um, Melrose, 911, no voices at South Tower?
00:13
Uh,
00:14
no,
00:15
no,
00:17
this is, um, it's a, it's that, uh, medical facility here on Melrose, um, what is that, um,
00:27
What is it, Long Green?
00:31
But you can code it out if they needed their callback.
00:37
It's a nursing home for the...
00:46
11. Home LPR, please.
00:53
Sue, in references Melrose Quay, you say it wasn't a self-power?
00:58
No, it's not a self-power. It's the nursing facility,
01:02
but I had no way of identifying exactly where it came from.
01:06
Like, which patient was?
01:09
That's what we check out.
01:16
Autumn Lake Healthcare. I just need to code.
01:19
I can't, um, you want to call the number back first? Because I don't know who calls it in.
01:25
Well, I'll call them that and I'll see what they, uh, what they have.
01:29
Okay, 10-4[1].
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
10-4: Acknowledgement; message received and understood (OK or affirmative).
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.