DOUG RICHARDS
11Alive.com
Reprinted with Permission
DUNWOODY, Ga. - Jeff Green and Tony Moats say they've relived daily the call their fire units answered January 24th at a home in Dunwoody.
At 1:05 a.m., dispatchers sent them to 1687 Houghton Court North. When they got to the neighborhood, they say they couldn't find the right house -- the mailbox was unmarked -- and couldn't find any evidence of a fire anywhere.
"No smoke was smelled, no neighbors were out, no noises no reflections - because it was dark - no glows that we'd seen or anything," Moats recalled during a news conference. Moats and Green have hired former DeKalb District Attorney J. Tom Morgan, and his former chief assistant DA John Petrey to represent them.
Five hours later, they got another call to the same location. The house was in flames. The woman inside, 74 year old Ann Bartlett was dead.
The county fired Green and Moats, saying they didn't try hard enough the first time to find the apparently smoldering fire that killed Bartlett.
The firefighters say county dispatchers also bear responsibility for the fatal fire.
"It's a tragedy for the Bartlett family. My condolences go out to the Bartlett family," said Green.
"I'm always on board to save a life. That's the number one goal of a firefighter. And the distress that was conveyed to 911 was not conveyed to the units in the area," said Green.
Green is referring to the original 911 call made by the woman who eventually died.
"I set my house on fire... Can you come out here quick?" Bartlett told dispatchers.
"I did not know that anybody was in there trapped," said Moats.
"All we were told was, a house on fire, and we were given a set of numbers," said Green.
Moats says he got out of his fire truck and found nothing. Green says he searched the adjacent neighborhood in his truck for eight minutes before asking the dispatcher if there was any further information.
"She said no," said Moats.
The firefighters say 911 dispatchers should have stressed that the fire call was a possible entrapment.
"Had they been provided the iinformation from the 911 call, we would not be here today," said Morgan.
Moats and Green have appealed their firings.