Male found lying on porch near West 61st street, Cleveland OH
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.
According to the dispatch call, emergency responders were dispatched to check on a male found lying on a porch near West 61st Street. The resident reported not knowing the individual. Responders proceeded without emergency lights to assess the person's welfare.
Audio|Heard on: Cleveland Police - West
Listen to dispatch call
01:38
Transcript:
00:00
I did get Code 2[1] that came down on West 61st.
00:03
Caller reported a male lying on her porch.
00:07
She doesn't know who he is.
00:09
Are they okay for their lunch, or do you want me to wait until we get the night cars?
00:17
Well, can you go run by that porch and see,
00:21
and handle that before your lunch?
00:29
Okay.
00:34
And radios it,
00:36
you know, regardless, they're good for their lunch after that, okay?
00:41
It's happy.
00:47
Thanks for any 12th.
00:48
Three when able.
00:52
Go ahead.
00:55
Carers start doing equipment inspections with the OIC so it'll be a couple minutes before they can
01:00
make it out to their car and start taking runs.
01:02
But you'll have Adam 33 and Adam 34.
01:06
You'll have a Charlie C1,
01:09
a Trelley 33,
01:11
and a Charlie 35.
01:16
Copy. We're holding 23, all three and fours.
01:24
32, thank you.
01:25
Near West 61st street.
01:27
Caller said she can see on her ring camera that there's a male lying on her porch.
01:32
No idea who he is.
01:34
It's going to be a two.
01:36
Cat is 6.006.
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
Code 2: Urgent but non-emergency response; proceed promptly without lights or siren.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
W 61st St, Cleveland, OH 44102
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.