Pedestrian struck by vehicle on East Academy Street, Clayton NJ
Heads up: This post was detected from real-time dispatch audio. Information may be incomplete, and the situation may evolve. Always verify using official agency releases.
A pedestrian was hit by a motor vehicle on East Academy Street near Jackson Avenue in Clayton. The injured person was unresponsive and breathing abnormally. Emergency responders requested a helicopter for transport.
Audio|Heard on: Gloucester County Fire Radio
Listen to dispatch call
02:16
Transcript:
00:00
Station 41,
00:02
BLS 61,
00:04
Medic 2, Fire 1,
00:07
East Academy Street in the area of Jackson Avenue, Clayton, pedestrian motor vehicle crash, Station 41, BLS 61, Medic 2.
00:18
On Fire 1, Clayton, East Academy Street in the area of Jackson Avenue, a pedestrian motor vehicle crash, 2053.
00:32
I'm a medic service on me.
00:34
Okay,
00:37
Medic. Hey, all you have someone respond us.
00:39
Della 611.
00:45
Medic 2, BLS 61.
00:49
For a male, still in the roadways, unresponsive, agonal breathing.
00:53
Yeah,
00:54
the helicopter on standby.
00:58
This one, top.
01:01
County, 241, arriving.
01:03
Standby from 8.
01:05
G, 41.
01:22
B.L. 13, Medic 1, EMS1, Woolwich Township, 216, Hoover Drive between Regan Boulevard and Bush Court, cardiac emergency.
01:30
The LS 13, Medic 1 on EMS1,
01:33
Woolwich Township, 216, Hoover Drive between Regan Boulevard and Bush Court, a cardiac emergency, 2056.
01:47
John, Chief, we welcome.
01:50
Chief 41.
01:53
The squad coming to the scene second.
01:56
Second apparatus I want to go to Garwood Boulevard, set up in LPs for Garcy Street.
02:06
The police had called over request to fly.
02:13
Gawley, make sure a second apparatus goes there.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
E Academy St & E Jackson Ave, Clayton, NJ 08322
This shows a Google Street View of the area near the location, which might not be the exact address.
Correct
Incorrect
Not all dispatch calls become confirmed incidents. This reflects early radio traffic only. Treat with caution.