Questions arise about teen’s death in minivan
CINCINNATI — When sixteen-year-old Kyle Plush apparently was reaching for his tennis gear in the back of his minivan, he became helplessly pinned in the fold-away third-row seat. He knew he was in serious trouble.
Using the voiceactivated feature on his cellphone, he had Siri dial 911 and warned: “I’m going to die here.” He called again minutes later, this time describing his vehicle: a gold Honda Odyssey.
Two police officers drove around at the boy’s high school looking for him but left after 11 minutes, one of them reporting dubiously: “I don’t see nobody … which I don’t imagine I would.”
Kyle’s father would discover the body nearly six hours after the first call.
The teen’s death April 10 from what the coroner said was suffocation from compression of his chest has led to accusations of bungling on the part of Cincinnati police and the city’s 911 emergency center, contributed to a City Hall shakeup and raised questions about the safety of the Honda vehicle.
“This was a horrific tragedy. We share in their heartbreak around this,” Police Chief Eliot Isaac said of the boy’s family.
The furor has prompted major changes at the 911 center, which had been plagued for years with staffing, workplace and operational problems that were spotlighted after Kyle’s death. More changes could come after the police department’s internal probe and the county prosecutor’s investigation.
The police chief will present his findings to City Council on Wednesday on what went wrong in efforts to locate the teenager. But he said officers who went to the scene never received the vehicle description from Kyle’s second call.