WRAL Investigates

Durham woman says 911 calls were unanswered after she found car involved in Amber Alert

Lorna Ziegler said she called 911 multiple times after spotting the white Mercury Mystique involved in an Amber Alert issued on Monday. She couldn't get through to an operator.

Posted Updated

By
Monica Casey
, WRAL Durham reporter
DURHAM, N.C. — A Durham woman said she made multiple calls to 911 and nonemergency numbers on Monday after finding the car involved in Monday's Amber Alert.

Lorna Ziegler said she called 911 three times and Durham police’s nonemergency number twice after spotting a white Mercury Mystique in the Big Lots parking lot at 3420 Southwest Durham Blvd. near the intersection of Interstate 40 and US 15-501. Ziegler said she also called the emergency number listed as part of Monday's Amber Alert to no answer.

“I just kind of had a weird gut feeling,” Ziegler said of seeing the car.

Inside the car was food, clothing, a base for a car seat and baby blankets. Authorities found the missing boy, Jaxton Brown, nearby in his car seat.

Cothran and Brown walked away from the shopping center and into the nearby woods. As police searched for them Tuesday, WRAL reporter Chelsea Donovan found Brown's wallet near those woods and turned it over to police. The abandoned car remained in the parking lot until Tuesday afternoon.

Ziegler explained what she did when she realized the car matched the description in the Amber Alert issued.

“I parked, called 911 right away, did not get an answer [and] called about 30 seconds later,” Ziegler said. “Not an answer again."

After the failed calls to 911, Ziegler flagged down two people walking inside who did get through to first responders.

“It’s really frustrating,” she said.

On Tuesday, a city of Durham spokesperson explained why Ziegler's calls went unanswered.

"The 911 Emergency Call Center does have a record of three calls from that phone number, each ringing more than 33 seconds," the spokesperson wrote in an email to WRAL News. "Our records show that the center was experiencing a call surge, with 91 calls, during that time frame.

"The call center was normally staffed during that shift. Even though we were staffed appropriately, we sometimes experience ebbs and flows in calls, like all call centers, meaning that some calls may take longer to answer during a busy time."

The spokesperson urged anyone who is calling 911 not to hang up when their call isn't answered immediately.

"Callers should always let the phone to continue to ring, and it will be answered by the next available call taker," the spokesperson wrote.

The latest stats from earlier this month show of the 60 operational positions, which include call takers, 36 jobs are filled.

On the administrative side, which includes radio department staff, 19 of 20 positions are filled.

In total, about 69% of all positions are filled at the Emergency Communications Center.

Also, there are 10 part-time employees.

Ziegler says getting the calls answered is an important issue.

"Your heart is beating fast,” Ziegler said. “Iit's terrifying. You're like, ‘I need an answer right away.’ It's important, you'd think someone would answer for this emergency."

Ziegler, who is a mother of two children, said she loves Durham.

“I feel like we could help out as a community, not just police looking around,” Ziegler said. “I think it’s good to look out and be alert.”

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