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Jayme Closs 911 call transcript shows moments after teenager found: 'I 100% think it's her'

The teenager was abucted in October, and was found earlier this week in a quiet Wisconsin neighborhood 

Clark Mindock
New York
Tuesday 15 January 2019 19:03 EST
Comments
(AFP/Getty Images)

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The woman who opened her door on Thursday to find missing 13-year-old Jayme Closs on her doorstep with her neighbour got right to the point when she called emergency dispatchers to inform them.

Jayme had just walked up to Ms Kasinskas' neighbour, Jeanne Nutter, in a remote northwestern Wisconsin community and said she had escaped from being held captive.

Jake Thomas Patterson has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder over the killing of Jayme's parents and one count of kidnapping their daughter.

The 13-year-old victim was found in Gordon—a remote town 70 miles from her home in Barron—88 days after she disappeared on 15 October. She walked away from a cabin where she was allegedly held and asked Ms Nutter, who walking her dog, for help.

Police have released the call that came in about Jayme, which lasted roughly 30 mins.

Here is a transcript form the 911 call that came in:

Dispatcher: “Douglas County 911.”

Ms Kasinskas: “Hi. I have a young lady at my house right now, and she has said her name is Jayme Closs.”

Dispatcher: “OK. What's your address?”

Dispatcher: “OK, have you seen her photo, ma'am?”

Ms Kasinskas: “Yes. It is her. I 100% think it is her.”

Dispatcher: “Are you? — OK.”

Ms Kasinskas: “100%.”

Dispatcher: “Does it look like she's going to run?”

Ms Kasinskas: “No. She's sitting down. She's relaxing.”

Dispatcher: “OK. Hang on just a second. What's your name?”

Ms Kasinskas: “Yep.“

Dispatcher: ”What's your name, ma'am?“

Ms Kasinskas: ”Kristin Kasinskas.“

Dispatcher: ”Kristin. How do you spell the last name?“

Dispatcher: “OK. Did she show up walking?”

Ms Kasinskas: “A neighbor just walked up with her to our house and asked us to call 911.”

Dispatcher: “OK, hang on just a second.”

Dispatcher: “Kristin, I'm going to keep you on the line, OK?

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Ms Kasinskas: ”OK. Yep, sounds good.“

Dispatcher: “Kristin, is the neighbor that walked her up, is she still there?”

Ms Kasinskas: “Yes, she is.”

Dispatcher: “OK. ... Can you ask the neighbor, did the female just walk up to her house, or how did she come across her?”

Jeanne Nutter: “OK, hey. My name is Jeanne Nutter. We have a cabin up here in Gordon on. ...”

Dispatcher: “OK, ma'am. Can I just get your name?”

Dispatcher: “OK. Can, do you have a cabin address?”

Ms Nutter: “I'm not up here very often in the winter. I just happened to come up today.”

Dispatcher: “So how did she come up upon your cabin?

Ms Nutter: ”I was walking my dog, and we were almost home and she was walking toward me, crying, saying, 'You got to help me, you got to help me.' So I didn't want to go into my cabin because it's too close to Patterson's house.“ (This is in reference to the home of Jake Thomas Patterson, the man police have accused of abducting Jayme.)

Dispatcher: ”And she said her name is Jayme Closs?“

Ms Nutter: ”Yep. And when I walked into this house, they recognized her immediately from the poster.“

Dispatcher: ”OK.“

Ms Nutter: “He thought he was going to come back home …”

Dispatcher: ”Who is going to come back?“

Ms Nutter: ”His name is Jake Patterson. Jake Thomas Patterson, she said.”

Dispatcher: OK. Hold on.“

Ms Nutter: ”And apparently ... a few doors down from our cabin.”

Ms Nutter: “So we're kind of scared because he might come.”

Dispatcher: “Yep.”

Ms Nutter: “So if the cops could get here soon, we would. ...”

Dispatcher: “I have many deputies coming that way. I'm going to keep you on the line.”

Ms Nutter: “OK.“

Dispatcher: “And she said, 'I am Jayme Closs'?”

Ms Nutter: “Yes. She said, 'He killed my parents. I want to go home. Help me.' ”

Dispatcher: “And what was the male's name?”

Ms Nutter: “Jake. ... Jake Patterson.”

Dispatcher: “And she said he killed her parents and she wants to go home?”

Ms Nutter: “Yes. She didn't know where she was. When I saw her, she was saying, 'Where am I? Where am I?' I said, 'You're in Wisconsin.' ”

Dispatcher: “And did she say he's gone right now?”

Ms Nutter: “Yes.”

Dispatcher: “(Were) they at a cabin?

Ms Nutter: ”Well, I think ... he lives there year-round.“

Dispatcher: ”And he's supposed to be back at midnight?“

Ms Nutter: ”Yes.“

Dispatcher: ”OK, hang on.”

Operator: Jeanne, can I get your telephone number? Do you have a cellphone?”

*Ms Nutter gives cellphone number.*

Dispatcher: “OK, Jeanne, I’m gonna place you on hold, but don’t hang up.”

Dispatcher: “I’ve got multiple deputies headed out there, so just stay on the line with me. Does she seem like she’s gonna need medical attention at all?”

Ms Nutter: “I would think yes. I was a social worker for 30 years, so yes.”

Dispatcher: “What do you think is her medical condition right now?”

Ms Nutter: “I think shock and cold. A good thing happened here.”

Dispatcher: “Yep, just try and speak very calm and if she feels, just don’t try to push her too much.”

Ms Nutter: “No, we’re not.”

Dispatcher: “OK ma’am, just stay on the line with me.”

Ms Nutter: “I will.”

Dispatcher: “Can you tell me how many people are in the house?”

Dispatcher: “Ma’am, my deputy just wants you to lock the doors. And don’t let the dogs out or anything, just everybody stay inside until I can get deputies there.”

Ms Nutter: “OK.”

Dispatcher: “And I’m just gonna start paging out medical, I’m gonna have them stay in the area because I don’t want to have anybody come up into the house until the deputies get there, but I want them in the area. Is this a cellphone that you’re on, Jeanne?”

Ms Nutter: “No, I’m on a landline phone.”

Dispatcher: “Jeanne, did she state how far away the house or the cabin is that she was at? Did she say where Jake is?”

Ms Nutter: “She has no idea where he is, she told me that when he leaves her she doesn’t know that he’s gone, he turns the music up real loud … he hides her under a bed, he’s the only one that lives there.”

Dispatcher: “Does she remember how far she was walking before she met up with you?”

Ms Nutter: “She was like, maybe 100 yards from my cabin.”

Dispatcher: Does she seem comfortable right now?”

Ms Nutter: “Yeah, we have her wrapped up in a blanket.”

Dispatcher: “Do we know what type of vehicle or if he works anywhere?”

Ms Nutter: “He doesn’t work, and I asked her what kind of car it was, it’s red, he used to be in the military, it’s a red car. There’s a bunch of cars in the driveway. I’ve walked by that place.”

Dispatcher: “Do you know what road it’s on?”

Ms Nutter: “It’s on Eau Claire Acres Road.”

Dispatcher: “Do you know Jake?”

Ms Nutter: “No, we only come up here periodically, but he’s never been friendly or talked to me, and we’ve been here four years.”

Dispatcher: “OK, have you seen him though?”

Ms Nutter: “No. I don’t even know what he looks like. She just said that all the people who hang out at his house apparently do not know who she is.”

Dispatcher: “From the house you’re at right now, where would that place be?”

Ms Nutter: “I’m telling you, I’ve been coming here four years and never seen his face. The driveway, I just walk by it and I just noticed he hasn’t really plowed his driveway, just kind of swept at the end. She doesn’t have any shoes, she’s wearing his tennis shoes.”

Dispatcher: “OK, and all the doors are locked? I’m just gonna let you know, when the deputies pull up, they’re just gonna give me instructions on how they wanna handle it. They’re not far down the road, OK? I need the dogs to be put in a shut room because there’s gonna be a lot of deputies coming in. It’s just, there’s gonna be a lot of commotion, dogs react differently.”

Ms Nutter: “Are they close? We’re nervous.”

Dispatcher: “They’re close. Can you see the suspect’s house from where you’re at?”

Ms Nutter: “No, cause the road kinda curves, it’s too curvy and woody.”

Dispatcher: “You guys are doing a good job of keeping her comfortable.”

Ms Nutter: “And you’re doing a good job of keeping us calm.”

Dispatcher: “That’s why we’re here. And you said the car Jake drives is a red car?”

Ms Nutter: “Yes, it’s red.”

Dispatcher: “Are you guys all in like the living room, where are you guys at in the house right now?”

Ms Nutter: “We’re all in the living room.”

Ms Nutter: “Saying that he’s gonna be home at midnight is not a for sure thing, she doesn’t know where he went. OK, somebody’s here, it’s a police officer. We need to let them in, right?”

Dispatcher: “Hang on, I’m asking them. OK, was there a deputy that knocked on the door?”

Ms Nutter: “No, they’re in here with us.”

Dispatcher: “OK, Jeanne, I can let you go. Thank you, good job.”

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