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Listen to the recording of Buddy's 911 call
It was a call the emergency operator never expected to receive. Instead of tears, screams or a plea for help, she could hear only barking and a distinctly canine whimper.
Anywhere else and the emergency services might have hung up, blaming a prankster. But the specially-trained German shepherd dog Buddy had already saved his master three times by making emergency calls to police with his teeth.
Police in Scottsdale, Arizona, released a recording yesterday of the latest call by 18-month-old Buddy when his owner suffered a seizure.
“Hello, this is 911. Hello . . . Can you hear me? Is there somebody there you can give the phone to?” the emergency worker asks. Buddy responds by barking and whimpering, but the operator stays on the line because any call from his owner, Joe Stalnaker, brings up an alert on the emergency computer system to say that a trained assistance dog may call when his master is incapacitated.
Chris Trott, the emergency despatcher who took the latest call, said that it was the first time in her five years in the job that she had received an emergency call from a dog.
“It was interesting. The entire room was amazed. There are dispatchers who have been there quite some time – 20 years – and never had a call from a dog before,” she said.
After the paramedics arrived, Buddy rode in the ambulance with his owner to hospital.
Officer Dave Pubins, a police spokesman, said that the call on September 10 was the third time the specially trained dog had summoned help.
“There were two other occurrences when the dog had done this. It was the same thing before. They heard the dog in the background,” he said.
Mr Stalnaker is prone to potentially fatal seizures after suffering a brain injury while serving in the US military a decade ago. He adopted Buddy at the age of 8 weeks from a Michigan-based group called Paws With A Cause, which trains so-called “service dogs” to help humans.
Mr Stalnaker trained Buddy to pick up the telephone and bring it to him whenever he falls. All the buttons are programmed to call the emergency operator.
He said: “He doesn’t actually sit there and dial 911, but whenever he picks up the phone, one of his teeth inevitably hits the number, and if it’s held down for more than three seconds, it dials the police department.”
Without Buddy he would be forced to live in a home because of his disability. “He knows what to do. He’s looking after me,” Mr Stalnaker said.
Buddy is not the first “service dog” to call the emergency operator for help. Leana Beasley’s four-year-old rottweiler, Faith, made an emergency call by pressing a speed-dial button with her nose and barking urgently when her epileptic owner fell out of her wheelchair and hit her head on a kitchen cabinet at her home in Washington state in 2004.
“I sensed there was a problem on the other end of the 911 call,” said Jenny Buchanan, who took the call. “The dog was too persistent in barking directly into the phone receiver. I knew she was trying to tell me something.”
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That was a lovely story.
All the anti-dog brigade should be ashamed of themselves. One dog like this is worth the lot of them put together. Rock on guys!
Ange, Somerset, UK
That was really sweet ^_^ I guess other people doesn't know how to appreciate dogs.. they are man's bestfriend..
Takiyake, Hawthorn, Australia
Most dogs would put humans to shame!
Virginia, Brisbane, Australia
Nice story from the Times
Nicholas Iles, Oswestry, Shropshire, United Kingdom
Dogs are the most beautiful intelligent animals, makes you wonder why there is so much abuse and neglect, what a beautiful story and such a handsome dog. I am so proud of Buddy.
Gail Jones, Cheshire, UK
When my deaf father was alone at home with our second dog (a Korthal, Czekolovakian deer-and wolfhound), if the postman was at the gate with a parcel or the phone rang, the dog would come and warn my father. And this without any training! I'm positive she could have learnt to pick up the phone too!
LN, Bristol,
This made me cry, can dogs possibly be any better?
Regina, London,
Buddy should get a job in a call centre !
James Alexander, London, UK
Recently a friend accidentally set her kitchen on fire. She was alerted by the excited behaviour of her cat until she got out of bed and came down to investigate. The cat possibly saved her life. The fire ruined the house but my friend was able to escape in time.
Jasper Deane, Burnham, UK
And millions of this super dog's canine cousins are kept unfed or watered in cages so crowded they cannnot move, are anally electrocuted, bludgeoned, drowned or skinned alive. All for some human's bit of fur on a coat, glove lining or trinket.
hel, Norwich,
hard not to cry
Jedi, London, UK
tears to my eyes
Mike, Manchester,
Don't they say that a dog is a man's best friend!
Nathalie Hachet, Manchester, UK