
UPDATE: Audio is fixed now 👍
She called for help. She gave them her exact coordinates. She told them she was scared. And they still couldn't find her.
On February 27th, 2024, Amanda Nenigar called 911 after crashing her car in remote desert terrain near the California-Arizona border. In the hour-long call, she sounded confused and desperate as she attempted to describe the mountainous terrain where her vehicle had gotten stuck off the highway. The dispatcher instructed her to find her location using Google Maps — and she did. She gave him her coordinates. But law enforcement ended up searching for her 30 to 40 miles away from where her body was eventually found.
Her 911 call had been dispatched to California — not Arizona — where she actually was. CHP units spent roughly five hours searching before concluding efforts that afternoon. She was not located that day.
A mother of two, Amanda was last seen alive on February 28th in Blythe, California. About a week later, her car was found abandoned in the rural Arizona desert south of the small town of Cibola — the back of the vehicle resting on a large boulder, deep in terrain with no paved roads. Her body was found nearly a mile and a half from her car on March 29th — over a month after she first called for help. Investigators believe she had been attempting to find shade under a tree to escape the desert heat before she died. Her clothes were found scattered along the path she had walked.
Her sister, Marissa, told reporters that Amanda even provided the correct GPS coordinates and still did not receive the help she desperately needed. "She did not have to die like this," Marissa said. "If they had listened to her 911 call and written down the coordinates, again, she would still be here with us."
This is a case about a system that failed. A call that went to the wrong state. A woman who did everything right — and still didn't make it home.
The Operator walks you through the full timeline, the 911 call itself, the search that ended too soon, and the family's fight for answers. "This is really scary," Amanda told the dispatcher. She had no idea how right she was.
And because The Ope believes you should never leave an episode without at least one reason to smile...
Happy Ending 🚨🐱🥓
We close out today with a call that has absolutely no business being as chaotic as it is. A man dials 911 — not because of a crime, not because of an emergency — but because his girlfriend cooked the bacon. His cat got involved. And now someone needs to answer for it. The Operator breaks down every glorious, unhinged second of this domestic dispute that law enforcement definitely did not sign up for, and somehow, somewhere, it ends on a high note for everyone. Even the cat.
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