Mother of dead son sues T-Mobile after sitter couldn’t get through to 911

DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) — The mother of a six-month-old that died after her babysitter couldn’t get through to a Dallas call center has sued T-Mobile.

Back in March, CBS 11 News spoke with Mayor Mike Rawlings about his frustration and the danger the situation posed for residents. The Mayor said anyone could run into trouble if there’s a surge in calls, but the odds are worse for some cell phone customers. “If you’ve got a T-Mobile phone service be very, very careful because you may not be able to get into 911,” he said.

Problems at the Dallas 911 center may have contributed to the death of a 6-month-old baby. The Dallas Police Department is investigating after the boy’s caretaker dialed 911 but was unable to get through.

The city confirmed that ghost calls from T-Mobile phones were overwhelming emergency lines at the time.

Bridget Alex said that the urgency in finding a solution came too late for her son. “He was only 6 months,” she said. “It wasn’t his time.”

Alex was at her nephew’s funeral when young Brandon’s babysitter called to say that he had fallen and would not wake up. “I said, ‘Why couldn’t you call 911?’ She said, ‘I am calling 911. They are not answering their phones.'”

The City of Dallas reported that T-Mobile phones were spontaneously dialing 911, a problem that has been reoccurring since November, tying up the call center for up to hours at a time. At one point on Saturday, March 11, the city reported that 422 calls were on hold.

The city’s goal is to answer all 911 calls within 10 seconds. But on that Saturday night, callers were on hold for an average of 30 to 40 minutes. Alex said that her babysitter made three calls to 911, but never got through. “The last time she called, they had her on hold for 31 minutes,” the mother said.

“I just want y’all to tell me, why didn’t you respond to my son? That’s all I want to know,” Alex continued.

The grieving mother said that she drove home, picked up her son and raced him to the hospital herself. They arrived just after 7:00 p.m. — just over an hour after the babysitter’s first 911 call. By then, Alex said, her son had stopped breathing. Within the hour, a doctor pronounced him dead.

Alex blames her son’s death on the City of Dallas and T-Mobile for failing to fix the problem. Now, she said, it is too late to fix anything. “At the end of the day, I’m still going to be here hurt, because he’s not going to be here,” Alex said. “I’m not going to get to see him or smell him or touch him or kiss him ever again.”

The city said that it brought in 10 extra call takers that day after 911 started seeing a surge in calls.

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