Around the Neighborhood
Williamsville / Amherst — Developing
Bicyclist Struck at Maple & Palmdale
Amherst Fire Dispatch Tones Out a Pedestrian-Versus-Vehicle Call at Maple Road and Palmdale Drive — 16-Year-Old Male Reported Conscious at Scene With Amherst PD First on the Air[1][2]
At 9:13 p.m. Amherst Fire Dispatch toned a Main-Transit EMS call for “a bicyclist’s truck, Maple Road at Palmdale Drive,” followed thirty seconds later by a clarified version of the same page: “a pedestrian struck a bicycle… at Maple Road and Palmdale Drive, 16-year-old male, Amherst Police on location reporting he is conscious.”[1][2] Main-Transit 92 was rolled, with Main-Transit 5 and an additional rig stacked in on the same channel within two minutes.[3] Tone on the channel was calm — consistent with the conscious-at-scene report — and the call ran cleanly through dispatch handoff. The intersection sits at the eastern edge of Amherst near the Williamsville-Eggertsville seam.
Williamsville — Amherst PD
Hit and Run at the Squeeze Juicery
5:52 p.m. APD: A Locked Gray Jeep Grand Cherokee in the Lot at 5712 Main Street, Williamsville — “Stop Out for the Hit and Run”[4]
Amherst PD walked a unit over to the Squeeze Juicery at 5712 Main Street — village storefront block, west of Transit — at 5:52 p.m. on a hit-and-run complaint. The struck vehicle, per dispatch: “a locked gray Jeep Grand Cherokee.”[4] No reported injuries broke onto the channel. Routine documentation call.
Williamsville — Main-Transit FD
Airport Alert Standby at Main-Transit
7:00 p.m.: Williamsville Fire’s Main-Transit House Toned to Report to the Hall for a BNIA Airport-Alert Standby[5]
Amherst Fire Dispatch raised Main-Transit Williamsville at 6:59 p.m. with a back-to-back page — first to “report to your fire hall,” then to clarify the reason: “for an airport alert standby.”[5] The standby is a routine staging posture — Main-Transit’s assignment is the off-airport reserve when BNIA declares an alert — and the channel never broke into an active response. No follow-up traffic surfaced.
Amherst — Sheridan Drive
Quiet Sweep at Citizens Bank: “Make Sure Those Protesters Aren’t Blocking the Driveway”
4:50 p.m. APD Drive-By at 3180 Sheridan Drive — “Everything Looks Fine”[6]
Amherst PD radioed for a swing-by past Citizens Bank at 3180 Sheridan Drive at 4:50 p.m. to confirm protesters were not blocking the driveway. The patrol unit answered with the day’s defining APD tone: “10-4, I just drove past and everything looks fine, but I’ll drive past again.”[6] Nature of the protest did not break onto the open channel.
Overheard: The Wires
Amherst PD — 4:50 p.m.
Cookies on Main
An APD Welfare-Check Call Captures the Most Concise Sentence the Channel Produced All Afternoon[7]
Amherst PD called for a check “on the two black females going towards Walgreens on Main Street trying to sell cookies” at 4:50 p.m.[7] That is the entire transmission. Whether the cookies were homemade, factory-sealed, scout-affiliated, or merely allegorical is information the radio declined to clarify. The unit cleared in eleven seconds.
Amherst PD — 9:01 p.m.
Couple, Yelling, Carrying a Shovel
Welfare-Check-Possible-Domestic in the Area of Countryside and Somerville — Description Reads More Like a Crime Novel Than a Dispatch[8]
An Amherst PD welfare check went out at 9:00 p.m. on a couple walking down the street yelling at each other in the area of Countryside and Somerville. The descriptors from the complainant, read in sequence: “white male wearing a black baseball cap with tattoos… female wearing a black t-shirt, black leggings, walking westbound. He was carrying a shovel and a tool bag.”[8] Two cars were toned for cover. The shovel-and-tool-bag detail is the kind of thing that, at 9 p.m. in June, can either be a man heading home from a yard job or the opening shot of a true-crime podcast. The radio declined to specify.
Amherst PD — 4:01 p.m.
Two-Week Squatter on Pepper Tree (Red Jeep Edition)
A Resident Reports a Red Jeep Parked in the Street With “No Activity on It” for a Full Fortnight[9]
An Amherst PD unit relayed at 4:01 p.m.: “It’s Pepper Tree. It’s a red Jeep that’s parked in the street for two weeks, no activity on it.”[9] Two weeks is exactly long enough for the neighbors to know your habits, suspect your absence, and finally pick up the phone.
Amherst PD — 5:33 p.m.
Kid, Motorcycle, Sidewalk
A Six-Word Amherst PD Broadcast That Doubles as the Defining Image of a Suburban Saturday Evening[10]
“A kid riding a motorcycle up and down the street in the sidewalk,” per Amherst PD at 5:33 p.m.[10] The unit answered the inevitable follow-up question with the second most evocative two-word phrase of the shift: “So forth.”[11]
South-Erie Fire Control — 1:50 a.m.
Strudel Firemen, Stand By
S-E FD Control Opens an Overnight Page With a Hailing Phrase Whisper Has Been Trying to Get Wrong for Months[12]
The literal radio call was an EMS request — 164 Barnstead Drive, 20-year-old male, possible overdose, not breathing — but the opening hail, as the channel captured it, was: “Strudel Firemen, we’re…”[12] Strudel Firemen is not a real department. Strudel Firemen will outlive us all.
Amherst PD — 9:12 p.m.
“Yeah, We’re Fucking Serious”
A Hot Mic on Amherst PD, Logged for Posterity, Sixty Seconds Before the Pedestrian-Versus-Bicycle Tone-Out at Maple & Palmdale[13]
One officer to another at 9:12 p.m. on the open Amherst PD channel: “Yeah, we’re fucking serious.”[13] Whatever the underlying disagreement was, it was eclipsed inside a minute by the Main-Transit bicycle-struck dispatch. Some hot mics get the last word; this one didn’t.
Regional Blotter
Amherst — Cardiac Arrest
CPR at 229 Drayton Lane
Amherst Fire Tones an Echo Response for an 83-Year-Old Male, Unconscious and Not Breathing — CPR Started in the Driveway[14][15]
At 6:29 p.m. Amherst Fire Dispatch announced an echo response — the highest EMS severity — for 229 Drayton Lane between Dunrose Drive and Peppertree Drive: “83-year-old male, unconscious, not breathing.”[14] Amherst 5 was first to ack inside the same minute. By 6:30 p.m. dispatch confirmed “attempting CPR at this time,” and three minutes after that Amherst PD on scene formalized the call type on its own channel: “We’ve got an 83-year-old male, cardiac arrest.”[15][16] Patient disposition did not break onto the open channel before the call cleared.
Genesee County — Working Fire
“Do Not Enter the Attic”
5:28 p.m. GIFC: Working Fire at 3280 Stony Point — Command Calls Off the Attic Push as a Foam Line Soaks the Blue Line and Gasoline Runs Down the Driveway[17][18][19]
Genesee Inter-County Fire Control toned a working fire at 3280 Stony Point at 5:28 p.m., with the foam line called for on the “blue line to soak.”[17][18] By 5:34 p.m. the OPS channel reported “gasoline flowing down the driveway,” and at 5:52 p.m. dispatch issued the line of the shift: “On Stony Point, working fire. Do not enter the attic.”[19] The OPS channel continued to track hose length and 2-1/2″ line allocations into the 8 p.m. hour, with one $90,000 contents valuation noted on the air at 8:25.[20] Interior crews appear to have been pulled before the roof was opened.
Niagara County — Fatal MVA
Possible Deceased Male in a Vehicle on Braley
1:48 a.m. NC FD Dispatch: “A Severe Crash Notification Right at the Curve on Braley Just Before the Intersection at Dickerson” — Four Hours Later, a Second Page Adds the Words No Dispatcher Wants to Say[21][22]
Niagara County Fire Control toned a two-vehicle MVA at the intersection of Dickersonville and Braley Road at 1:45 a.m., with the call upgraded three minutes later to “a severe crash notification right at the curve on Braley just before the intersection at Dickerson.”[21] The same dispatcher returned to the channel at 5:53 a.m. with two short sentences that broke the rhythm of the overnight: “Possible male, unconscious, deceased in one of the vehicles. Long injuries for the other vehicle.”[22] Investigation by a Niagara County dispatcher continued into the 6 a.m. hour at Rapids and South Transit; whether the “possible” qualifier survived the rest of the morning’s on-scene triage did not break onto the open channel before the window closed.
South-Erie / Collins — Possible Structure Fire
Morton’s Corner Mutual-Aid Page
9:41 p.m. S-E FD Control Alerts Morton’s Corner for a Mutual-Aid Class on Collins; Within Seconds the Channel Confirms “the Scene of a Possible Structure Fire”[23][24]
South-Erie Fire Control alerted Morton’s Corner firefighters for mutual aid into Collins at 9:41 p.m., followed almost immediately by Collins 9 responding on the OPS side.[23] Dispatch then characterized the scene: “This is the scene of a possible structure fire. Time out.”[24] Collins 3768 was added on the next breath. The call did not escalate to multiple alarms before the channel quieted.
NYSTA Ch 4 — D-Ramp Incident
“Male Had His Arm Hooked Around a Female’s Neck. No Further Information.”
7:14 p.m.: Thruway Authority Logs the Day’s Most Incomplete Sentence on the D-Ramp[25]
NYSTA Ch 4 transmitted at 7:14 p.m.: “Outbound D-Ramp, got our vehicle on a flue car on the ramp, going to be the D-Ramp… male, had his arm hooked around a female’s neck. No further information.”[25] Thruway traffic moved on. The channel returned to plate reads inside seven minutes.
South-Erie — Overnight Overdose
Echo at 164 Barnstead
1:50 a.m.: A 20-Year-Old Male, Possible Overdose, Not Breathing — the Overnight’s First Page of Note[12]
South-Erie Fire Control toned an EMS request at 1:50 a.m. for “164 Barnstead Drive, a 20-year-old male, possible overdose, not breathing.”[12] The page repeated at 1:50:46 with the address confirmation “That’s 164.”[26] Disposition did not break onto the open channel before responding units were on scene.
Other Calls of Note
4:05 a.m.: BuffaloLimo channel relays a 30-year-old male, overdose on heroin, “unconscious, diagonal breathing” — a city-side cab dispatch passing along an EMS-flavored callout.
[27]
4:30 p.m.: Amherst Fire to 4715 Transit Road in front of Andrews Jewelers between Main and Sheridan for an alarm — “set off by cooking,” reset at 4:31 p.m.
[28]
5:36 p.m.: Amherst Fire lift-assist request, 8760 Howard Drive between Connection and Fairfield, 91-year-old male, cold response.
[29]
6:09 p.m.: Amherst Fire EMS at Deer Creek Lane — 90-year-old male fell, bleeding from a head injury.
[30]
3:07 p.m.: Amherst Fire EMS at 5225 Donington Road off Hollington Road — 22-year-old landscaping-company employee with difficulty breathing, third-party call from the Akron-Newstead area.
[31]
3:17 p.m.: Eggertsville EMS to 112 Windermere Boulevard; immediately followed by a separate Moore-and-Princeton page for a 47-year-old male having a seizure.
[32]
6:48 p.m.: BFD Ch 1 dispatch — man down at Lafayette Square, Washington Street.
[33]
7:50 p.m.: BFD Ch 1 dispatch — EMS staged behind 399 Hopkins at the gas station.
[34]
9:43 p.m.: Amherst Fire (Ellicott Creek) to 118 Pheasant Run Road, 25-year-old male asthma patient with “puppy breathing” reported on the air.
[35]
2:13 a.m.: NC FD Dispatch to a Sweeney Street apartment for a 43-year-old female with abdominal pain and vomiting.
[36]
6:57 a.m.: NC FD Dispatch to Beatty Avenue between Lincoln and Georgia for a 63-year-old female fall, BLS standard, lift-assist.
[37]