South Korean 911 call gets local woman fast response


Recommended Posts

South Korean 911 call gets local woman fast response

South Korean 911 call gets local woman fast response

BY ASHLEY TUSAN JOYNER

News-Democrat

*************

The advanced technical abilities of a local public safety answering system enabled an emergency telephone dispatcher in St. Clair County to answer a frantic 911 call placed from Seoul, South Korea, early Friday morning.

At approximately 4:43 a.m. Central Standard Time, Patricia Michaels, a supervisor at the St. Clair County emergency dispatch center, answered the call from a woman who claimed her husband had beaten her, cut off her hair with scissors and used the scissors to cut her arm.

The woman also claimed her spouse had tried to choke her in the presence of their infant child.

" The clarity of her voice was amazing," Michaels said. "It sounded like she was right here."

But the caller, a military dependent, was phoning from her residence in Seoul near the Yongsan Army Garrison, where her husband had been deployed from Scott Air Force Base more than one year ago.

She, however, had relocated to South Korea from the metro-east two days before the reported domestic attack.

"Her words were 'Help me. I need help,'" Michaels said. "She was just so upset because she felt like she didn't have anywhere to go. Her husband had no idea what she was doing. Being a mother, I had a lot of empathy for her," Michaels said.

The call, which was transmitted digitally with voice over Internet protocol, or VoIP, was placed from a computer using Vonage phone service.

The computer-based international system offers phone service using high-speed Internet.

The phone number was registered to an O'Fallon address.

"When she first subscribed to the service, they lived in O'Fallon," Michaels said. "I guess it's the kind of thing where your phone system goes wherever your computer goes."

After determining the caller's local military connection, Michaels contacted a sergeant at Scott, who then was able to communicate with the base in South Korea and arrange for the South Korean National Police to respond to the woman's apartment.

The call lasted a total of about 45 uninterrupted minutes.

"It's not uncommon to get these life threatening calls," she said. "This one was unusual because the caller was half way across the world. I knew I could rely on Scott to deliver the help we needed."

Norman Forshee, a 911 coordinator with St. Clair County, was unavailable Wednesday to explain exactly how VoIP calls are handled by the county's CENCOM answering system.

But Michaels says dispatchers are well-prepared for such calls.

" We have the best training in the state of Illinois," Michaels said. "This is first time we've gotten a call from overseas, but CENCOM has all kinds of capabilities."

Source:Belleville News

And I've heard people complain about VoIP. This just proves it can be a life saver. Good job for the dispatcher, waiting 45min, and having the smarts to call Scott's base.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Carol, Windows XP is still being used today only in a small capacity. It is still the best OS there is due to its backwards compatibility with other older software, the customization features, and friendly UI, and people often feel that upgrading to newer OSes is cost prohibitive in specialized Industries or developing countries, so the market share as of now is around 0.2%-0.3%
    • If I could, I would commemorate it the best way possible: Replacing old machines that are still running Windows XP with something more modern, stable and better.     Noone and nothing should be running Windows XP in 2026.
    • Google's new hand-wave reCAPTCHA can be bypassed with a stock photo by Ivan Jenic Image: Screenshot Google is testing a new reCAPTCHA method that asks you to wave at your camera to prove you're human. So, besides solving puzzles and reading distorted text, you can now use your computer’s camera to pass the verification test. When the hand gesture verification is triggered, your browser asks for camera access and prompts you to perform a simple gesture, like a wave or an open palm. Google says it records a short video of the movement and uses AI to extract 21 hand-knuckle coordinates to complete the verification process. The video is then immediately deleted, and Google swears it doesn't keep it. The process alone can be uncomfortable for people who wouldn’t want their biometric data, which hand scans technically qualify as, recorded. But it gets even more nuanced, as early testers discovered that the new hand-waving reCAPTCHA can be passed with a simple stock image. A user on X tested the new challenge using a stock image of a hand fed through OBS Virtual Camera, and it passed. I wanted to verify it, so I tried the same thing. It took me a few tries and a few stock images, but in the end, I was also able to pass the test. I simply had to readjust the stock image of a generic person waving inside OBS, and Google’s mechanism registered it as a legitimate hand gesture. Once again, it didn’t even have to be a video or an AI-generated hand animation. Given the simplicity of the process, the entire action can be automated in minutes. All it takes is a simple Python script to render the new reCAPTCHA method obsolete. And it doesn’t even have to be an AI bot, which is usually used for solving puzzles and other verification methods. The new reCAPTCHA method is still in its early phase, and Google will, hopefully, update its AI to at least reject still images. However, this incident, combined with users’ initial skepticism about Google’s practices regarding user data, likely won’t make too many people wave at the camera anytime soon.
    • 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 "to fund healthcare and tuition" 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Who do you think you are talking about, some COMMUNIST? We are better than them, doG bless Murica!!! p.s. I'm from a country where government does exactly that, i.e. not form US.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
    • First Post
      carols23 earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      Tom Willson earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Apprentice
      Asgardi went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • One Month Later
      sunrisea2milk earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      495
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      262
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      151
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      90
    5. 5
      macoman
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!