First things that comes to your mind?

And another thing would be --

"Shit. I forgot to buy donuts."

:giggle:

:rofl2:

My first reaction would be that something had happened to my son. Complete and utter fear.
 
My first thoughts will be, "Who did my Grandma ran over this time?" :whistle:
 
If my bf is not with me, it would probably scare the hell outta me...

Elseway an accident regarding one of our friends :shrug:

Jamie
 
id probably wonder what my dumba$$ brother has done this time. hes been arrested twice in the past year and has totaled 2 cars one of which was this week he wrecked his wifes car. hes an idiot.
 
And another thing would be --

"Shit. I forgot to buy donuts."

:giggle:

you know, depending on the cop that might work! my nephew is in law enforcement and he eats krispy kreme plain glazed donuts like theres no tommorow. and when he worked dispatch at the city PD i went in and took him supper once and took a dozen donuts... he said the officers on duty gave him a hard time because anytime donuts were at the station theyd eat them!
 
I had the 2 policemen came to my house few years ago, turns out the phone dialed 911 by itself. The cop came by to check to make sure everything is ok. My roommate and I have separate line, which I used to have TTY line back then. When the policeman radioed the dispatcher which number did we call the 911 system? Turns out to be my sister's phone so we had the phone company fix it.

Does that happen to any of you?

I had several officers and a sheriff come to my door after I called 911 via TTY to let them know I was deafblind and bipolar (I wanted this information added to my records). My suburb didn't have a dedicated TTY line for 911 calls at the time, so my call was intercepted by a 911 operator. Imagine my embarrassment when I explained that everything was fine and didn't have an emergency.
 
I had several officers and a sheriff come to my door after I called 911 via TTY to let them know I was deafblind and bipolar (I wanted this information added to my records). My suburb didn't have a dedicated TTY line for 911 calls at the time, so my call was intercepted by a 911 operator. Imagine my embarrassment when I explained that everything was fine and didn't have an emergency. :Oops:

ouch lol. that's what non-emergency phone line is for. i guess you found out in embarrassing way... :hug:
 
ouch lol. that's what non-emergency phone line is for. i guess you found out in embarrassing way... :hug:

You can blame the person (a Deaf person, BTW) who told me it wouldn't be a problem since my suburb supposedly had a TTY line for 911 calls. (Obviously this person was wrong.)
 
ouch lol. that's what non-emergency phone line is for. i guess you found out in embarrassing way... :hug:

Fortunately, the officers and sheriff were very understanding, took down the information I wanted them to have and told me they would inform 911 so that it could be added to my records.
 
"Lord have mercy! - Do I owe some chump change somewhere? Split City!"
 
I would be thinking Who died? This happen to me in 89 my father died in Baltimore and the WV state police came to my house and told me.
 
you know, depending on the cop that might work! my nephew is in law enforcement and he eats krispy kreme plain glazed donuts like theres no tommorow. and when he worked dispatch at the city PD i went in and took him supper once and took a dozen donuts... he said the officers on duty gave him a hard time because anytime donuts were at the station theyd eat them!

Haha, Gotta love these donuts huh? :lol:

"Lord have mercy! - Do I owe some chump change somewhere? Split City!"

:lol:

It's time to split! :P


I remember last year, 2 police officers came to my door out of the blue. It was unexpected. When I said "Hello, How can I help you?" The officer just handed me the paper and when I read the paper, it was an active warrant for another person who had lived here at this place before I lived here. I explained that it wasn't me.

The police officer didn't believe me and I was like "WTF?" I kept insisting that it was not me who was listed on the active warrant. I had to end up explaining that I lived here at this place for 4 years and that person has not been here at all. One of the officer asked me if I had any proof refuting my statement for a place of residence. So, luckily, I had the paper right next to me on the desk showing that I did actually live here for the past 4 years. In the end, finally, both officers believed me and apologized for the error.

Whew! My heart was racing so fast when that happened, lol.
 
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