Update: San Diego police have released new documents and information to NBC 7 Investigates detailing what officers knew when they responded to an emergency callout last month. Click the link to see what NBC 7 Investigates uncovered:
Nearly two hours before police arrived to find a woman dead in her apartment, neighbors had been calling 911 begging for help while fearing for their own safety. NBC 7’s Alexis Rivas has the story.
In order to protect their identities, NBC 7 Investigates is using fictitious names for the neighbors. Officers found Connie’s lifeless body inside her condo Wednesday morning, June 15. But neighbor interviews, dispatch records, 911 call timestamps and surveillance video all gathered by NBC 7 Investigates show the calls for help started nearly 12 hours earlier.
“I’ve never heard somebody that angry in my entire life,” said Sally. “He was running so hard that I genuinely thought he might break through the ceiling. I remember saying verbatim, ‘He’s going to kill her.’” Police say officers tried calling Connie’s phone and looked for her car. But since Connie didn’t answer the door, officers ultimately left.
While he may be devastated, Jones told NBC 7 Investigates he wasn’t totally surprised to hear about her murder. Unfortunately, Jones says her alleged killer was no stranger to Connie, him or the police.Jones shared cell phone video with NBC 7 Investigates, taken back in October 2020. In the video, he claims Connie called him to help get Chambers out of her apartment.
He says no officers were dispatched in the first hour because the calls were initially categorized as a lower priority event.“Unfortunately those calls can stack in terms of time of dispatch to the time of response,” said Shebloski. The lieutenant went on to say, “There was a reasonable interpretation that this man lived there.” Shebloski describes a confidential police record known as a Prior Activity Code file which gives responding officers a history or notes about the address they are being dispatched to. He says that file indicated that Chambers had been contacted there before.
The officers responding on June 14 would not have seen any of the other information included in that April 22 report. That included officers telling dispatch there were visible injuries on Connie, that there was no prior domestic relationship with Chambers, and that she did not want to pursue charges against him. Officers advised her to lock all her doors and call police if he came back.
While Shebloski says officers “get it right” the vast majority of the time, he says the chief’s office is now reviewing the police response in this incident. He says that’s standard in “critical incidents.”
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