911 operator sentenced to prison for hanging up on thousands of emergency callers (1 Viewer)

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Cold Ethyl

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A former Houston 911 operator who hung up on thousands of people including calls for help during robberies and homicides will spend 10 days in jail and 18 months on probation.
Harris County jurors on Wednesday found Crenshanda Williams, 44, guilty of interference with emergency telephone calls.

Williams spent a year and a half taking 911 calls at the Houston Emergency Center until she was caught in August 2016 and fired by the city. A supervisor who oversaw Williams was also placed on one year of internal probation, officials said at the time.

Williams’ misdeeds came to light after HEC officials performing routine monthly audits of 911 calls noticed a high volume of Williams’ calls lasted less than 20 seconds, known as “short calls.” In a news release detailing the sentencing, prosecutors said a review showed Williams hung up on “thousands” of short calls.

The calls included one where a caller tried to report a violent robbery and another where a caller was about two drivers racing in an area on Interstate 45 where people had been killed speeding just weeks earlier.

Williams told investigators she often hung up because she didn’t want to talk to anyone at those times.

Harris County prosecutors said the county had an obligation to hold public servants criminally accountable when they break the law and the community’s trust.

“The citizens of Harris County rely on 911 operators to dispatch help in their time of need,” said Lauren Reeder, a Harris County prosecutor.

When Williams’ actions were initially exposed, HEC Manager Joe Laud called them an anomaly.

“This is just a very significant event,” Laud said at the time. “And we feel that her actions do not represent all the call takers in this facility or call takers in general. They have a very specific interest in doing a great job in providing emergency response to people.”

The center - which opened in 2003 after the city consolidated 911 calls for the police, fire, and emergency management services - handles millions of calls annually and about 9,000 a day. About one-third are true emergencies.

Franklin Bynum, Williams’ attorney, said the case revealed “systemic” problems at the Houston Emergency Center, including a call-taking system that drops calls instead of rerouting them if dispatchers are not ready to take them. He also criticized the statute prosecutors used to charge Williams, and said he expected it to be overturned on appeal.

“She was going through a hard time in her life and she was a poor-performing worker at the Houston Emergency Center,” he said. “But punishing her doesn’t do anything to fix the problems that still exist at the emergency center.”

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HG

95T exp
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Crenshanda...
 

Jizdrop1

Hope Mojo dies
What a cunt. She should have got far longer in jail

Franklin Bynum, Williams’ attorney, said“She was going through a hard time in her life and she was a poor-performing worker at the Houston Emergency Center,” he said. “But punishing her doesn’t do anything to fix the problems that still exist at the emergency center.

Of course punishing her and giving her a long time in jail would fix the problems. it would make others think twice about doing the same.
Seems Franklins a fuckwit as well.
 

mrln

silent ghost
What a cunt. She should have got far longer in jail



Of course punishing her and giving her a long time in jail would fix the problems. it would make others think twice about doing the same.
Seems Franklins a fuckwit as well.
it will turn into something racial. thats why he said what he said. this country is so fucked up right now,one can't fart in public without someone getting offended and complaining about it,then making a big deal about it then marching against public flatulation then a bill will be passed and turned into law saying it violated some kind of polution act then the offender being jailed for 90 days and fined 10,000 USD!
 

msr

AHHHHH FUCK
We should ask msr he's the specialist in nigger names.

Ah, forget it, there's already a photo posted.
Thank you for the recognition. Sadly, the website I was using as the source material has changed it's format and is no longer entertaining.
 
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msr

AHHHHH FUCK
Harris County prosecutors said the county had an obligation to hold public servants criminally accountable when they break the law and the community’s trust.
.
Does the same obligation apply to cops? I wish there was a paper history of Harris County prosecuting bad cops, and that someone would post it.
 

Deep six in Paradise

"The truth? You can't handle the truth!"
Harris County prosecutors said the county had an obligation to hold public servants criminally accountable when they break the law and the community’s trust.
.
Does the same obligation apply to cops? I wish there was a paper history of Harris County prosecuting bad cops, and that someone would post it.[/Fergit it! especially in Texas. There are true untouchables in life...and the local, state and federal police agencies rank right up there with Mom and apple pie. A few deplorable exceptions still exist. You know, like the Serpico case in New York. But by and large no such scoldings by any government official will you hear against any police agency.
 
  • Good Job Faggot
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