Dispatcher Calls His Handling of Powell 9-1-1 Call ‘Clumsy’

By Lindsay Whitehurst, The Salt Lake Tribune

The 911 dispatcher who took a social worker’s emergency call just before Josh Powell killed his sons and himself in an explosive house fire Sunday said he didn’t recognize “the lethal quality” of the call.

The dispatcher has been criticized for failing to get critical information and dispatch deputies quickly. Authorities in Washington state have expressed dismay at the handling of the call and the 22-minute police response time to the Graham-area house.

Speaking publicly for the first time to “Dateline,” the dispatcher, Dave Loverak, said it was “painful” to listen to a recording of his “clumsy” and “faltering” responses to social worker Elizabeth Griffin-Hall.

“I wish I had recognized the urgency of the situation. But, you know it’s so difficult to second-guess,” according to a transcript of the interview, which aired at 9 p.m. Friday.

Loverak said he’d heard of Josh Powell, who was then under suspicion in the 2009 disappearance of his wife, Susan Cox Powell, and embroiled in a bitter custody dispute with his in-laws, but didn’t make the connection with the 911 call.

“I was aware of Josh Powell’s story. But I didn’t associate his name with the story, much like I wouldn’t be able to tell you the name of the 18-year-old who was just convicted of the killing, that 9-year-old, [in Missouri] but I know the story. And so, his name was not resonating with me,” Loverak said.

Griffin-Hall came to Josh Powell’s house Sunday for a supervised visitation with his two sons, 7-year-old Charlie and 5-year-old Braden. They were living with their maternal grandparents at the time, and a Washington judge had recently told Josh Powell he’d have to complete a psychosexual evaluation if he hoped to regain custody.

When Griffin-Hall arrived, the boys ran ahead of her into the house and Josh Powell slammed the door in her face. As she pounded on the door, she heard Josh Powell saying he had “a surprise” for the boys, and then one of the boys crying.

When she called 911, though, Loverak asked her for seemingly unimportant details, like a description of her car, but misses the significance of others, like Griffin-Hall’s report that she smelled gasoline.

It took some time for Griffin-Hall to get the address of the home.

At the end of the call, Loverak tells Griffin-Hall that deputies “have to respond to emergencies, life-threatening situations first.”

Hearing those words now is “excruciating,” he said. But he also said a quicker response time likely would not have made a difference.

“Even as I second-guess myself, I can’t help but think about ‘What if I had gotten the call in one minute? What if we had deputies there two minutes later?’ They would not have immediately kicked the door and rushed in. They would have staged and cordoned off the area and treated it like a hostage situation,” Loverak said in a portion of the interview released on “Dateline’s” website. He compared himself to the judge who allowed Josh Powell to have visitation.

Police believe Josh Powell had spread gasoline throughout his house before Griffin-Hall arrived. He apparently attempted to kill the boys with a hatchet before setting the structure on fire.

“You don’t automatically default to the notion that the person you’re dealing with is a psychopath, because we’re normal people and we don’t live in that kind of a mindset,” Loverak said.

Copyright © 2012 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Cindy Dunaway

    It’s so hard to look back on calls we have taken when they end badly.  We are our own worst critics sometimes.  And Monday morning quarterbacking doesn’t help either.  The truth about this one is that Mr Powell had made up his mind what was going to happen when his children got there and noone was going to stop him.  Dave is right when he says that law enforcement would have never run into the house as soon as they got on scene, they would have set up perimeter, called in a negoitator, a tactical response team etc…. The whole incident would have over before anyone got on scene.  It’s so unfornate all the way around. So sad.

  • Azleilei

    This is so scary because it literally could happen to any dispatcher, however, I am pleased to see that this dispatcher holds himself accountable to an extent for his “clumsiness”.  Dispatchers are expected to be perfect 100% of the time, but we are only human too.  I listened to the tapes on this call and am so disappointed that no one has pointed out how long it took the social worker to give an address.  My mind tells me that she had to have had the address to get to the location and then she, in a stressful situation, forgot it and put the responsibility on the dispatcher to “gps” her location.  I even wonder about this world….this man was under suspicion of his wife’s disappearance and suspected of crimes involving child pornography, but still a judge allowed the small children to associate with him.  And lastly, just think how many first responders could have died in the explosion had they responded right away.  I hope ultimately the thing people remember is that it was not the dispatcher or the first responders or judge or social worker who killed these children.  It was a very bad person and there are a lot of them out there.  They are the reasons we have jobs, why we are needed and they are the “bad guys”.  I pray we all put our best foot forward each day and do the best we can every single time.