Bank Job on Transit: Suspect Hands Teller a Note, Williamsville Goes to Perimeter
An Amherst PD officer broke onto the air at 2:52 p.m. with a description that froze the channel: “Bank, 8160 Transit, 8160 Transit, Clark was given a note for money, still getting more info, all the cars headed?”[1] Within seconds dispatch was rolling Towers 6, 3, 7, 4 and 13 with CF Air 1 staying up overhead.[2] A perimeter went up around Maple and Transit, with a unit moving down Renaissance and another posting at Maple and Brucewood.[3][4]
The radio described the suspect as a black male, roughly 6′3″, in a black crew-neck sweater and black shorts with a green camo book bag, last seen near a barber shop with no direction of travel; a unit noted “he just handed a note.”[5][6] Amherst PD asked for a county car to assist, with a 13 unit reporting eyes-on at one point near the suspect’s path.[7] As of the brief’s 3:00 p.m. cutoff the perimeter was still rolling.
Single-Car Burns Out on North Mill Grove — “Fully Involved,” Two Patients on the Pavement
Amherst Fire dispatch went out shortly after 7:10 a.m. on a motor vehicle accident on North Mill Grove Road — “at least one vehicle,” the dispatcher said, before Engine 3 was assigned to respond first.[8][9] By 7:15 the picture had sharpened on the air: “Clear, one car off the road, fully involved. Got two patients for evaluation.”[10] The crew gave the chief a heads-up that a second ambulance was already rolling, and Hammer 2-3 marked responding shortly after.[11][12] The off-road position was the giveaway — a vehicle through the brush and into a sheriff’s car was used as a marker to keep the scene clear.[13]
Williamsville 9 to Wehrle Drive: Minor Ankle Injury at 1100 Wehrle
At 11:03 a.m. Amherst Fire dispatched Williamsville 9 to 1100 Wehrle Drive on a call described over the air as a 244 (rescue) handoff.[14] An on-scene officer ruled out anything beyond an ankle — “If there’s any lung fracture or anything like that, it’s just localized to the ankle” — and reported minor injuries on the call at Wehrle [transmission partly unclear].[15][16]
Patron Kicks Through Glass Door at Red Roof — Then Admits It
Amherst Fire dispatch put a call at 5732 Main Street, Suite 2 — the Old Dirty Dog dog-wash between South Ellicott and Evans — with the description of a white Jeep in the parking lot and a 60-year-old male.[17] Within seconds Amherst PD added the context that landed the story in the morning news: “There’s a 42-foot red roof, and a female patron broke the glass door,” with an officer asking whether they wanted to prosecute.[18] The story self-resolved on the air a minute later: “She’s admitted she kicked the window.”[19]
Focal Seizure Across from 280 Glen Avenue, in the “Nature Building”
At 12:14 p.m. Amherst Fire dispatch sent an ambulance across the street from 280 Glen Avenue, “at the Nature Building, for a 50-year-old female having a focal seizure,” with Williamsville Second Colony recommending a cold response moments later.[20][21]
Hit-and-Run Tip at Wegmans — Suspect Just Moved Two Aisles Over
A witness called the Sheridan Wegmans at 5275 around 12:20 p.m. to say a vehicle had “hit a parked car and then moved a couple of rows over and parked.”[22] The complainant marked the suspect vehicle live to Amherst PD — “third row from SJ, halfway back, row 14” — before the responding car cleared on location.[23]
Ellicott Creek Alarm on Pheasant Run
At 2:20 p.m. Amherst Fire dispatch put Ellicott Creek on an Activation 5 residential fire alarm on Pheasant Run.[24] No structure detail came back over the air before the close of the window.
Domestic at Flint: Mom Locks Son Out, Then Closes the Call
An Amherst PD unit summarized the call at 1:19 p.m.: a man said he had “a domestic with his mom” that ended in a verbal argument and a locked door, with the resident sitting on his own property when the officer arrived.[25] By 2:23 the air confirmed: “The domestic at Flint, you can close it out.”[26]
Pizzeria Chest-Pain Call at Matina, 6040 Sheridan
At 7:40 a.m. Amherst Fire put an EMS call at 6040 Sheridan Drive — the Matina Pizzeria — for a 50-year-old female reporting chest pain.[27] A second chest-pain call followed at 12:38 p.m. at Woodside Village Home Park, 233 Main Street, between Thompson and Goodrich: trailer M29A, an 86-year-old female.[28]
The Sniper of the Sedge: Airsoft, Wildlife, and a 7:31 A.M. Complaint
Amherst PD took a Longwood complaint at 7:31 a.m. that captured a particular brand of suburban morning: “Complainant states the male behind the sedge shooting his airsoft — he’s shooting at that wildlife in the back.”[29] The radio moved on; the wildlife’s response was not entered into the log.
The Case of the Phantom Cat on Millersport
At 11:23 a.m. an Amherst PD officer told dispatch what may be the most relatable status check of the day: “I’m on Miller’s Port. I can’t locate the cat. I had to leave a message for highway. See if they’ll call me back, give me a better location. I’m heading to Sheridan.”[30] No follow-up. No cat.
Hillview Has a Laundry Problem: The Man, the Fence, the Clothing Line
Depew PD picked up a 12:52 p.m. complaint at the Hillview Restaurant at 6135 Transit Road that the dispatcher delivered with admirable economy: “There appears to be a homeless person in the parking lot hanging their clothes all over the fence. He’s playing with the owner.”[31]
Hobby Lobby Lot: Yelling, Screaming, and Not a Lot of Info
A Buffalo Limo dispatcher worked through a 1:39 p.m. complaint about a male and female “yelling and screaming about the little child they have with them” in the Hobby Lobby parking lot, near a SUV. The dispatcher signed off the report with a one-line summary of every report-the-public ever filed: “That’s all the information I have. The caller wasn’t very informative.”[32]
“The FBI Will Be Here at the Pump”
An 11:15 a.m. transmission on the B-N Ground frequency casually dropped a line that, decontextualized, would launch a thousand conspiracy podcasts: “The FBI will be here at the pump each and every day.”[33] Context lost to the channel; tone unbothered.
God Save the Queen, Said the Shuttle Driver
A TPS BNIA Shuttle driver came up on Businesses at 11:29 a.m. with a non-sequitur transmission for the ages: “Well, wow, I missed it, huh? God save the Queen.”[34] Later in the day the same channel produced what may be its second-best line of the year — “Oh, it’s like a ghost house in the back.”[35]
Lancaster SWAT Wants to Know About the Newsletters
Of the day’s many strange transmissions, this one wins for the gulf between the agency on the radio and the question being asked. At 12:22 p.m. a LancPD SWAT unit asked dispatch: “Was everybody on Franklin and Lombardi also given newsletters?” A minute later the same unit was “just making sure that they were notified.”[36] A canvass — a polite one — the city’s most heavily armed mailman.
“Diet Possibly Changed in the Shower?”
At 2:25 p.m. an Amherst Fire dispatch transmission landed mid-shift with the kind of question that demands a follow-up that never comes: “Diet possibly changed in the shower?” followed by “We’re right side possibly seen from the shower.”[37] The chief did not press for clarification.
Pedestrian Struck by Bulldozer Outside Library Branch
At 8:59 a.m. BFD Ch 1 dispatched Engine 1 as an EMS unit to Clinton under the Library for a pedestrian struck by a bulldozer.[38] The construction zone on Clinton Street is active — minutes later the channel was acknowledging a sanitation truck hydraulic incident at a separate Buffalo location with Engines 31 and 32 standing by.[39]
Wilson Cardiac Arrest on West Lake Road, CPR in Progress
Niagara County Fire dispatch sent help to 2719 West Lake Road in Wilson at 11:36 a.m. and was almost immediately told over the air that the patrol on location was reporting a cardiac arrest with CPR in progress.[40]
Yorkshire Park Middle School Reports “Smoke in the Building”
An 11:20 a.m. OPFD dispatch sent Hillcrest companies to standby in quarters before pivoting to a Yorkshire Park Middle School call — “reports smoke in the building, unknown source” — that an alarm company subsequently relayed as a pull-station activation, Zone 843.[41][42] No fire confirmed on the air.
Family Dollar on Jefferson: Pedestrian Struck by Car
At 2:23 p.m. BFD dispatched on a second pedestrian-struck call of the window — 909 Jefferson, between Cayuga and High, in front of the Family Dollar.[43] A unit reported a victim being worked on by Squad 26 minutes later.[44]