SHOOT: He also says: "I did not kill any of these people." Not 'my family' or my 'brothers and sisters, dad and mum'. And if everyone is already dead, why would the police have to 'hurry up'?
Click here for the transcript of the call
David Bain's 111 call Bain says he made the call to emergency services after arriving home from his paper round on the morning of June 20, 1994, and finding his family dead.
On March 18, jurors were played the tape with David Bain crying: "They're all dead, they're all dead. I came home and they're all dead" at the High Court in Christchurch today.
Bain made the call sometime after coming home from his paper round on the morning of June 20, 1994.
He called 111 and told an ambulance officer "they are all dead. My family are all dead, hurry up".
The ambulance officer who took the call described it to the court in March as "unusual" because Bain was able to give him basic information.
Thomas Dempsey said it was easy to get Bain's telephone number, address, name and what happened.
He said in his experience of answering hundreds of 111 calls from people who are "overwhelmed by a situation", callers often find it difficult to give simple information.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment