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Home / Crime and Justice / D.C. Mother Fights for 911 Audio of Son's Death

D.C. Mother Fights for 911 Audio of Son's Death

29 Jan

•

Summary

  • Mother sues D.C. for 911 audio after son's cardiac arrest.
  • 911 call miscategorized, delaying advanced life support.
  • D.C. 911 agency cites privacy for denying audio release.
D.C. Mother Fights for 911 Audio of Son's Death

Stephanie Clemans is pursuing legal action against Washington D.C. to access the 911 audio recording from the day her son, William Ostertag, suffered a fatal cardiac arrest. Ostertag collapsed in his apartment gym on November 2024, and records indicate an eight-minute delay in dispatching advanced life support units, despite a fire station being nearby.

The 911 call-taker initially classified the emergency as a seizure, a less urgent category than cardiac arrest. This miscategorization led to an initial dispatch of an ambulance lacking advanced equipment. Approximately 7½ minutes passed before the situation was upgraded, and paramedics from the adjacent station were alerted.

These paramedics arrived within a minute and successfully restarted Ostertag's heart twice. However, his brain had suffered irreversible damage due to oxygen deprivation. He died a week and a half later. Clemans seeks the audio to understand the delay, arguing that D.C.'s policy of withholding such recordings infringes on public accountability.

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D.C.'s Office of Unified Communications stated that 911 audio is released only to the original caller due to privacy concerns. However, advocates argue that other jurisdictions balance privacy with public interest more effectively. This case revives long-standing concerns about transparency and performance issues within D.C.'s 911 system.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Stephanie Clemans is suing Washington D.C. to obtain the 911 audio recording of her son William Ostertag's fatal cardiac arrest, seeking to understand the emergency response delay.
William Ostertag's 911 call was initially miscategorized as a seizure, which delayed the dispatch of advanced life support units and paramedics to his apartment gym.
D.C.'s Office of Unified Communications cites caller privacy and safety concerns as the reason for not releasing 911 audio recordings to anyone but the original caller.

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