Every evening at exactly 9:03 p.m., the emergency dispatch center received the same call. The report looked identical each time. The caller was listed as Margaret Lawson, age 91, and the complaint section was always blank. When operators answered, they asked the same routine question: “Ma’am, what seems to be the emergency?” After a short pause, a soft voice would reply politely, “Oh… I just thought someone should check on me.” There was no sign of danger, no medical issue, and no disturbance reported. It was simply a quiet home on the edge of town and a caller who seemed to want reassurance that someone was there. At first, dispatchers responded with patience, assuming the situation might involve confusion or loneliness.
As the calls continued night after night, however, frustration began to grow at the station. Emergency lines were meant for urgent situations, and some officers worried that these calls could distract from real emergencies. By the seventh evening, the duty sergeant assigned a young officer to visit the address and resolve the issue. The task seemed straightforward: explain the proper use of emergency services and politely ask the caller not to continue dialing 911 without a clear emergency. When the officer arrived at the small white house at the end of the quiet street, a single porch light glowed above the door. He knocked, expecting a quick conversation and a simple warning.
