Female found unconscious near North Main St with suspected overdose, Rochester NH
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, a female was found unconscious but breathing near North Main Street, Unit 305. Emergency responders suspect an overdose based on the presence of two empty pill bottles. Police, fire, and EMS units responded to the scene.
Audio|Heard on: Rochester NH Police and Fire
Listen to dispatch call
02:44
Transcript:
00:00
Okay, on responding to near North Main Street, Unit 305 to assess PD with standing entry.
00:09
Thank you. Okay, sorry.
00:15
6-7, go ahead.
00:17
6-7 to 3-8.
00:20
Okay.
00:22
Are you still outside?
00:25
Yeah, Ferrer and Fire just got here.
00:29
Probably. Could you bring one of the metals back to if you're near the cruiser?
00:35
Got.
00:41
Yes, you're file.
00:45
Do you have EMS too.
00:52
Affirmative will tone out EMS.
01:01
By alarm to EMS respond near North Main Street Unit 305.
01:05
By alarm to EMS respond near North Main Street Unit 305.
01:12
EMS4.
01:14
EMS4, go ahead.
01:15
Show floor on responding.
01:18
Ms. (name withheld). (name withheld).
01:40
(name withheld).
01:42
This is EEMS4.
01:44
Go ahead.
01:45
EEMS4.
01:47
PD advised that female is breathing and not conscious.
01:53
Acknowledge.
01:58
EMS is working now.
02:00
She is amazing and overdose.
02:03
A couple of all of them to tell.
02:08
6.7. Q go again.
02:10
UQ ECHOE.
02:15
6.7. Appears to be an overdose; two empty bottles of pills.
02:21
Copy.
02:30
What's 3A's location?
02:34
near North Main Street, Unit 305.
02:39
Copy, seven-quarters remaining on scene to finish up some items here and I'll be heading that way.
Disclaimer:
This transcript was automatically generated and may contain inaccuracies. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
N Main St, Rochester, NH 03867
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.