SHERRI LY
WTTG
Reprinted with Permission
FREDERICKSBURG, Va. - A woman frantically called 911 while trapped inside her burning home. Firefighters knew where she was, but couldn't find her until it was too late.
Investigators in Spotsylvania County are now going over the 911 and dispatch recordings trying to figure out how this could happen. The 911 call is heartbreaking. At one point you hear Sandy Hill tell the dispatcher, "I'm going to die," while the dispatcher tries to get Hill to hold on.
Hill, who eventually died, is pleading for help while firefighters search the Fredericksburg house. The mother of the victim told a local newspaper that she wanted people to hear the 911 call, because it may help save someone's life.
It started as a small fire in a downstairs hallway. Hill is upstairs, the second floor filled with smoke, when she calls 911.
"I think the house is on fire," she tells the operator.
Chancellor volunteer firefighters arrive at the home on Spotswood Furnace Road, within four minutes of her call and begin searching the house a minute later. At the same time Hill is still on the phone with 911.
"Which bedroom are you in?" the operators asks. Then she relays the information to dispatchers on the line with firefighters, "There's a second female upstairs trapped." Hill responds "I'm in the back bedroom."
Two more minutes pass. Hill tells the 911 operator she's behind the door, up the steps to the left. Firefighters make it upstairs but don't find anything. In the fire dispatch recordings, a firefighter on scene tell the dispatcher, "You need to check to see if everybody is out of house or what. They searched the top floor-- no luck," he says. At that point, it's about eleven minutes into the search.
Spotsylvania County's Fire Chief says he's listened to the tapes, too, and has launched an internal investigation. He refrained from saying whether the firefighters did anything wrong, but says they are struggling with what happened. "I can tell you it's certainly playing, weighing very heavily on the first responders who were in that house that were doing everything they thought in their power to be able to reach her and have a different outcome," Chief Chris Eudailey said.
Hill's roommate also called 911 and got out of the house on her own. The roommate Christine Brown's 17-year-old daughter was rescued from a bedroom downstairs about 13 minutes after firefighters arrived, which appears to cause some confusion. Dispatchers inform rescuers Hill is still upstairs. Again, firefighters respond to the dispatchers.
"Second floor, no results-- we're going to the first floor again," one of the rescuers says. Someone else responds, "She's reported to be in a bedroom by the door if that helps at all."
Then the dispatcher says, "We can hear the firemen banging on the door."
The 911 operator can still hear Hill breathing, but she has not spoken to the dispatcher for several minutes.
The home's layout may have proven difficult for firefighters to navigate. The Cape Cod style home was built in the 1950's. Jacqueline Mills went inside last year when the home was being rented. Inside she described the upstairs as like a mouse maze or a dollhouse, with various doors leading to other doors.
"You didn't know whether to turn left or turn right," she said. "I could barely find my way up into the second floor myself in broad daylight," Mills recalled.
It's easy she says to understand how firefighters could have gotten confused in a smoke filled house, unable to see. The windows she remembered too were painted shut.
The firefighters had a thermal imaging device but did not use it. Although a firefighter is heard calling for a ladder to the second floor on the fire dispatch recordings, no ladder was extended to Hill's bedroom window.
There was also a delay in informing firefighters that the fire was out, so the house could be ventilated. All those things, the chief says will be part of the investigation. He plans to have the team meet this week, but won't give a deadline for when the investigation will be complete.
Rescuers finally found Hill after more than 20 minutes, upstairs in a second floor bedroom by the door, where she told them. She was pronounced dead at the hospital.
"It was very disturbing to me," the chief said of the 911 call and what happened.
On the 911 call, the operator asks Hill if she can get to the window. Hill, now exhausted, her breathing labored, says she tried but it wouldn't open.