Crime & Safety
911 Hang Ups On Rise; Here's What To Do If You Misdial
Gwinnett Police said 27 percent of all 911 calls in June were "abandoned" calls.

Gwinnett Police has seen an alarming increase in the number of 911 hangups in recent months.
Such a call is all too familiar at the Gwinnett 911 Center, where abandoned 911 calls have nearly doubled since January.
According to police, nearly 15 percent of all 911 calls in January were abandoned calls. In April, that number grew to 17 percent. In June, it spiked to 27 percent.
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Examples of abandoned 911 calls
Accidentally dialing 911
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Child calls 911
Multiple people call 911 for one emergency
Calls 911 and then changes mind
Child playing with disconnected phone (will still call 911)
“When a person hangs up on a 911 call, the call-taker takes the time to call the person back to insure that police or fire response is not needed,” Gwinnet Police public information officer Cpl. Michele Pihera said. “While the call-taker is trying to make contact with a hang-up caller, another person with a true emergency could be calling in.”
That’s a problem, police say, but there’s a simple solution.
Any time you call 911, even by mistake, stay on the line. If you don’t need a public safety response, tell the call-taker and be done with it.
“In a true emergency, seconds are valuable,” Pihera said. “It takes less time to make contact with a call-taker and cancel your call than to hang-up and force the call-taker to call you back to determine the nature of your call.”
Also, if you are a witness to a crime or traffic accident, please call 911. Your statements could be valuable to the investigation. Never assume that someone else is calling 911 in an emergency.
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