http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-57517243-504083/family-sues-dallas-cops-city-after-911-caller-deanna-cook-is-found-dead/
http://articles.nydailynews.com/2012-08-22/news/33326595_1_disturbance-dallas-police-department-operator
Lawsuit http://cbsdallas.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/cook-vs-city-of-dallas.pdf
The family of Deanna Cook, a woman who was murdered after placing a call to 911, has sued the city of Dallas and the police department, CBS DFW reports.
The lawsuit alleges that responding officers made two stops on their way to Cook's home in order to check out a burglar alarm and make a purchase at a 7-Eleven. It claims that officers arrived nearly 50 minutes after Cooke first dialed 911, screaming for help.
Furthermore, the suit alleges officers soon left Cook's residence after they knocked on her door and were unable to find her. The lawsuit faults the officers, saying that they "did not go around to the rear of Ms. Cook's residence, did not peak through all of Ms. Cook's windows.. and never attempted to forcibly gain entrance into her home."
It was not until two days later that action was taken by Cook's mother, sister and her two daughters, who became concerned when she did not show up for church. Cook's family called 911 to report her missing and was reportedly asked if they "had contacted the jails and local hospitals."
After eventually kicking down a patio door to Cook's home, her family discovered her body floating in a bathtub, where police believe she was murdered by her husband.
The case has brought scrutiny to Dallas' 911 system. The lawsuit claims that Cook's call was not prioritized and went to a holding queue, and that once it was answered, a 911 operator took 10 minutes to file a dispatch request. Additionally, eleven minutes into the call, the operator disconnected the call and tried to call back only to receive Ms. Cook's voice mail. The lawsuit faults the operators for never following up to ensure that police had been immediately dispatched to Cook's address.
The lawsuit then goes further, blaming the city for an understaffed 911 call center. According to the suit, only 64 of 90 positions were filled at the time of Cook's death.
The filing also alleges discrimination.
"Your race does play a role, your gender does play a role. Would they have stopped at 7-Eleven if it had been someone in Highland Park?," asked Cook's sister.
"Ms. Cook, in other words, was a victim of her race, the nature of her call, the demographic of her south Dallas neighborhood," she said.
http://articles.nydailynews.com/2012-08-22/news/33326595_1_disturbance-dallas-police-department-operator
Police have refused to release the 911 transcript, but the Dallas Morning News reports that “Deanna Cook was heard choking, gurgling . . . screaming ‘Delvecchio, why are you doing this?’"
Patrick had multiple past arrests for allegedly assaulting Cook and police had responded to the address before.
Police say the seriousness of the incident was not relayed to them by the 911 dispatcher. Sources told KHOU-TV that “the operator never relays that Cook is being attacked,” only that police were to report to a disturbance.
But the 911 operator, who hasn’t been identified, said she didn’t feel like she knew what was going on at the house.
“I can say that it's obvious that there was an active disturbance taking place, the screaming and things like that, so I can't say that I knew what was going on, other than there was a disturbance,” she told the Dallas Morning News.
In a statement, the Dallas Police Department said it was "seeking to determine if the nature of the [911] call was sufficiently communicated...to the responding officers.”
Lawsuit http://cbsdallas.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/cook-vs-city-of-dallas.pdf