“Newtown 911, what’s the location of your emergency?”
Dispatchers calmly asked callers, whose shaky responses included variations of “12 Dickinson Drive” and “Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown.” The responders suggested that callers inside the school take cover.
“Sandy Hook School. I think there’s somebody shooting in here. Sandy Hook School. Somebody’s got a gun. I saw a glimpse of somebody and they were running down the hallway…Sandy Hook School, please,” a woman caller said with increasing urgency.
On another call, a custodian inside the school told 911 that he was hearing shots, and that the front glass doorway had been shattered.
Minutes later, with gunshot sounds audible in the background, he said the shooting was still going on.
The Newtown Police Department released almost 20 minutes of emergency call recordings on Wednesday under a court order nearly a year after a gunman killed 20 students and six educators inside Sandy Hook Elementary School. The Associated Press legally filed for access earlier this year, and recently won.
Several callers confirmed the school was on lock-down, and students remained inside the classrooms.
A woman teacher reported hearing gunshots in the hallway, adding that she was inside a classroom with her students. She said the door was not yet locked and that she would go to lock it.
Officials revealed multiple calls placed to local police, mostly from inside the school, during the morning of Dec. 14, 2012. The files did not include audio from state dispatchers.
The release creates “a new layer of pain for many in the Newtown community,” Town Selectman Pat Llodra wrote Wednesday on her public blog.
“Imagine yourself as a parent of a child who was killed, or a family member of one of the six educators. Imagine yourself as a teacher or staff member in that building desperate to save the lives of children. Imagine you are the parent of a child who was able to escape,” she wrote, cautioning the media to recognize the communal pain in the decision.
Neither MSNBC nor NBC will air or post to the Internet audio of the 911 calls.









