9-1-1 tapes indicate delayed response in woman’s death
01:00 AM EDT on Wednesday, October 24, 2007
By John Castellucci
Journal Staff Writer
PAWTUCKET — Recordings of the 9-1-1 calls made while Maria G. Carvalho was bleeding to death in her home on Gooding Street show that fire dispatchers failed to send an ambulance even though they were told she was losing blood.
The calls, which were routed by state 9-1-1 operators to the Pawtucket Fire Department’s dispatch center, begin at 10:57 a.m. Sept. 20, when Yvette LeBlanc, an 81-year-old neighbor of the Carvalhos, tells the dispatchers that Maria’s husband João has just come across the street and asked her to telephone them for help.
The calls end at 11:17 a.m., after one of the Fire Department rescue workers who was finally sent to 101 Gooding St. calls to tell the dispatcher to send the police.
By then, Mrs. Carvalho, a 53-year-old kidney patient, is dead, having lost an enormous amount of blood through the shunt inserted in her arm so she could undergo dialysis.
The attorney general’s office ruled on Oct. 12 that the failure to send an ambulance didn’t rise to the level of criminal misconduct, basing its finding on the determination of Assistant Medical Examiner Dr. Peter A. Gillespie that it isn’t possible to establish that the 15-minute delay caused Mrs. Carvalho’s death.
But Mrs. Carvalho’s family has placed the city on notice that it intends to take legal action, and the 9-1-1 recordings are expected to provide crucial evidence in the case.
The Pawtucket city solicitor’s office released recordings of the 9-1-1 calls yesterday, having withheld the recordings while the attorney general’s office conducted its investigation.
The recordings show that it was only at 11:11 a.m. — after the state 9-1-1 operator tells the Pawtucket Fire dispatchers that João Carvalho has called demanding to know why they haven’t sent a rescue truck — that one is finally dispatched.
Sean P. Mooney and Christopher A. Jeffrey, the dispatchers who were on duty at the time, have been fired. Both had less than a year on the job.
In an interview yesterday, Fire Chief Timothy P. McLaughlin called them “good kids. Unfortunately, they really made a really bad mistake,” he said.
Stephen M. Rappoport, the lawyer for the Carvalho family, said the rescue truck should have been sent as soon as the dispatchers heard that Mrs. Carvalho was bleeding.
Instead, they let LeBlanc talk about how Mrs. Carvalho was picked up every day by private ambulance for dialysis treatment, then told her the Carvalhos have to call for the rescue truck themselves.
“It went on and on and on. It was a farce,” Rappoport said.
LeBlanc’s call was initially to 9-1-1. Rappoport said it was immediately put through to the fire dispatchers.
“Well, and, a, he said they have a lot of blood, you know, like under her arm or something and on the floor,” LeBlanc tells the dispatchers. “So, I said, well what can I do? You should have called 9-1-1 instead of coming over here, you know.”
One of the dispatcher replies, “Um hmm,” and LeBlanc says João Carvalho has just gone back across the street. “He’s got a sore foot and he’s on his crutches,” she says.
“So where is he right now?” the dispatcher asks.
“He’s at — I guess [he] went back across the street. I mean, I said you shouldn’t have left Maria all alone. So anyway the front door is shut so he must be in the house.”
“A yellow house,” she adds. “right across the street from mine.”
There is some confusion. One of the dispatchers asks whether it’s João Carvalho who needs to go to the hospital.
“Not him, but her,” LeBlanc answers. “He’s on crutches and she needs to go on dialysis every day.”
“So why did he not call?” the dispatcher asks. “We can’t take against [inaudible] his will, or her will,” he adds. “You know, they would have to call.”
LeBlanc’s call lasts about 2 minutes. The state 9-1-1 operator calls Pawtucket about 10 minutes later.
By then, João Carvalho has called 9-1-1. “Something about, he called a half-hour ago and you guys haven’t got there yet,” the 9-1-1 operator says.
The dispatcher indicates he’s aware of the problem. “Bleeding from a dialysis site?” he asks the 9-1-1 operator.
“I don’t know,” the 9-1-1 operator answers. “That’s all he said over the phone. He was pretty outraged.”
jcastell@projo.com
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