Shannon Price: 911 call for Gary Coleman

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I just looked closer at the 911 call made by Shannon Price when Gary Coleman was mortally injured. She is an interesting person because she is so cold, callous and unwilling to help Gary. It stands out like a sore thumb. Instead of helping him, she’d rather talk about how she is sick, how she can’t be traumatized, how if she is stressed she will seize, how she can’t help him because he is lethargic, etc. It’s nauseating.

Read moreWhat stands out to me in this 911 call outside of her callousness, is her lack of details about what happened. In the beginning when she talks to the operator, she says:

“Um…um….I just found my… ah..I just had my husband go make me something downstairs, he just got home, I heard this big bang. I went downstairs. Blood everywhere.”

Yet later, she says:

Head is bloody. There’s blood all over the floor. I don’t know what happened. I really don’t know what happened. I just heard this bang and I went down there, and he is on the floor and I….

In her third recollection, she recalls different details:

I just asked him, “Can you go make me some food, you know, and he’s like yeah, yeah, and I….and he hit his head and I don’t know…I know its from his head, though, cuz I looked at the back of his head, and its all bloody and gross and, you know.

And here is her last recollection:

I don’t know if he had a seizure, I don’t know if he just hit his head and fell, cuz I mean he was kind of like… he wasn’t like convulsing or anything.

How come one time she has a clear recollection and the another times she doesn’t know anything? In the third version, there is absolutely no recall about Gary going down the stairs. This is highly notable. In the third version, she also seems to know conclusively he hit his head, too. How does she know that all of the sudden?

She also has a notable amount of false starts…that is she starts to say something and then stops, pauses and changes what she is about to say. In her first version of events, she says, “Um…um….I just found my… ah..I just had my husband go make me something…” In her third recollection, she starts to say “and I…and he hit his head.” I wonder what she self-censored out here? In the last version of what happened, she almost tells us what he was like… but stops herself. Why?

Why doesn’t she describe any of the details of hearing the bang, calling out for Gary, asking if he is okay, not getting a response and running down to find him in a pool of blood? Why are all these details missing?

You would think this would all stand out in her mind, because many people hear bangs and call out and ask a loved one, “Are you okay?” And when we don’t hear a response, we jump up to investigate. Our heart skips a beat until we know things are okay! How many times have you experienced a false alarm and gotten mad at your spouse for the lack of a response–for making you worry needlessly? We remember the lack of a response, but Shannon doesn’t. Why? This time it wasn’t a false alarm!!

How did Shannon know it was so serious without calling out? I mean, wasn’t she sick in bed? As she tells us she could barely stand, but she quickly ran down to check on Gary without calling out? I’m not buying it. You don’t forget these details, when you are honest. She might condense them at times, but she wouldn’t entirely change the facts, would she?

I also would expect her to have emotions of a person who discovered this gruesome scene. I would expect to hear shock, fear, terror, etc., but I don’t. Why?

All of the details of what happened are eerily missing. Shannon gives us tidbits, but nothing of substances. It’s highly notable.

I am stunned by the lack of emotional stress, too. Her voice is devoid of any fear, stress or concern. It’s lackluster considering her circumstances. I would expect her to have some form of an adrenaline rush, but I hear nothing. I heard a little heavy breathing early on, but that dissipated quickly. I hear her talk as if she is almost bored at times, and other times it appears as if she is whining and others she sounds angry and frustrated. I would not expect to hear that from a partner who just found their significant other in a pool of blood, unconscious, as she says.

Then later, when she tells us he is moving around and again, we don’t hear any hope, excitement, surprise, stun — nothing. It’s highly notable. It’s almost as if she is complaining about it. She says, “He’s just sitt’n there. He’s sitting up now up now…” as if it is no big deal! The word just jumps out at me like a waving flag.

The way she says her name when the operator asks for it, it is unbelievable. It’s like she is giving her name out for winning the lottery! It blew me away. She sounds almost chipper! You’d never know just hearing this that she was in the middle of a life and death crisis. It’s like she flipped a lid on her behavior, for a second. People who are panicked, afraid, or fearful don’t do this…

I also noted that she didn’t use pronouns when she described things– in the key time she should have a clear memory and when details should be there: “Head is bloody”–“Blood is everywhere.” People who are often deceptive leave off pronouns. I’ve seen it many times.

Next, she tells the operator she can’t help Gary for a variety of reasons, but one excuse is because if she gets stressed out she will have a seizure. Yet she had no problem, though, looking at the back of Gary’s bloody head. She says, “I know its from his head, though, cuz I looked at the back of his head, and its all bloody and gross and, you know.” Why didn’t that stress her? She also didn’t seem to have any stress going back to Gary several times. Isn’t that inconsistent?

Why does she yell at Gary, “What’s wrong?” as if he is perfectly fine? It’s like he is annoying her by doing something. She tells us she thinks he might die, and then she yells what’s wrong at him?? You hear anger in her voice when she says this. Why is she angry with him? Is that how you would feel if your loved one is gravely injured? She does not love this man or care if he dies, frankly. I don’t think it takes any special talent to see this.

The timing of when she tells us Gary’s wound is on the back his head is questionable, too. I was shocked she knew this information because she told us she couldn’t handle being with Gary, but yet she strangely knew where his injury was. If he was all bloody and bleeding all over, how would she know where the injury was–especially if she couldn’t handle the blood? Wouldn’t she be afraid if she looked, she seize? Also, when did she discover this??? We never heard. Why? I would think that would be traumatic to see that, wouldn’t you? In the first part of the 911 call, she didn’t seem to know, then all of the sudden she did, yet we hear no trauma in between of discovering this. It’s very strange!

Here are the excuses Shannon uses when she is asked to help Gary:

  1. Operator: Is there any way you can go down there at all?
    Price:
    ….I’ll try, I don’t know, I mean…I can’t….

  2. Operator: Can you tell him to put pressure on the wound?
    Price: No, its on the back of his head.

  3. Operator: Can you go where he is and help him?
    Price:
    He’s lethargic, I can’t really …help him. I just need help quick.
  4. Operator: Can you tell him to try to put pressure on the back of his head?
    Price:
    No, can’t. It’s like all bloody and I’m not trying to do….He…He’s not with it.

Do these support a woman who is concerned about someone who is injured?

I also found this statement very odd, “I’m just panicked. I don’t know what to do…I’m dragg’n (?). I just frick’n.…crazy person….hold on….” Why does she have all these false starts? Why does she say I just frick’n…What did she just do to call herself a crazy person? I don’t even want to guess…

When I listen to this 911 call, my alarm bells are blaring that something isn’t right. There are too many things that don’t add up, that don’t support what Shannon wants us to believe — that Gary accidentally fell and she has no clue what happened. Shannon’s behavioral evidence (my new term) suggests she knows more than she is telling us…. She is flat out inconsistent on too many levels to be believable, unless she is flat out mentally ill and unstable.

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Joran van der Sloot Arrested!

Shannon Price Speaks Out

File photo of actor Gary Coleman arriving at the 6th Annual TV Land Awards in Santa Monica

Shannon Price, Gary Coleman’s ex-wife who still resided with him, speaks out to TMZ (thanks, Celebitchy for the lead) and talks about her decision to pull the plug on Gary Coleman, who allegedly fell and then died last Thursday. I warn you she is beyond chilling!

Read moreWhen I watch Price, I am instantly reminded of Stacey Castor who was featured on 20/20 last week and who is known as the “black widow”. It’s something about their demeanor. They share a similar coldness.

Price gives off serious indications of someone who doesn’t know or even understand what empathy is. There isn’t a tear in her eye when she talks about pulling the plug on Coleman. Her eyes aren’t puffy and she is even animated in her chat with TMZ, which does not support a person who is grieving. She talks about Gary as if he were a piece of meat, not a human life about to be extinguished. I thought Michael Schiavo was cold, but she makes him look hot, warm and fuzzy!

Price says, “I’ve had a lot of people say, ‘yeah, she pushed him’, this and that, you know people are so cruel, they don’t even know! I was upstairs, he was downstairs [expression of disgust]. How am I going to push him?”

This is ludicrous. We do not know where she was when this happened. All we have is her word, which I wouldn’t put one cent on, frankly. She is colder than a nail in a freezer. Her emotions do not match her situation one iota!

Price says, “Why would I hurt my husband? Are you kidding?”

Is this supposed to convince us? It does nothing for me, whatsoever.

Listen to Price try to convince us that Gary was going to die or be useless no matter what was done. The way she talks about him is almost freakish.

Price says:

You know, the doctors told us, even if they did surgery on him, he would have died. He would have bled to death during the surgery. And they said even if they did take a chunk out of his brain, he would not be the same. He would be basically be like… Muhammad Ali. He wouldn’t be, you know…and….and…I mean he would have died sooner or later anyway from that… because its so..because the brain, it so traumatic.

I don’t want people to be so hard on me thinking that, you know, I had to pull the plug too early. He wouldn’t have made it anyway, his heart would have just given out……..and I don’t want people to think that I’m a BITCH, and that I didn’t care about him, but you know, be in my situation. I mean look what happened with Terri Schiavo. I always think of her case when it comes to this. I mean, I mean Gary was gone, his eyes were dilated, he wasn’t, you know, he wasn’t…he was just gone (shoulder shrug)…and he’s done a lot for me. He bought me a car…

This woman is cold, cunning, and creepy. She is very off and needs to be looked at with a magnifying glass!

Shannon Price, Gary Coleman 911 Call


ABC News Gary Coleman, Shannon Price 911 call

If there was ever a 911 call that sends chills down my spine, this would be it. There is no concern, fear or stress in Shannon Price’s voice nor in many of her actions. Shannon spends more time telling us about her problems than she shows or expresses concern for dying husband, Gary. It is very clear she does not care if Gary lives or dies. At times, her response to get him help is so slow and callous, you feel that she actually wants him to die. She leaves little doubt about it, actually. This 911 call is so disturbing, and I think you can even hear Gary in the background saying, “Leave me alone! Leave me alone!”

I will try to review this in the coming days.

Sarah Ferguson Talks to Oprah

Ferguson, Britain's Duchess of York, speaks during the opening ceremonies of the BookExpo America in New York

If there was ever a soft place to land after the shenanigans Sarah pulled, she found it in Oprah. Throughout the entire interview, I kept getting flashes of Rielle Hunter when she sat in the presence of big O. It’s like both women created alternative ways of dealing with reality. Hunter painted everything sunny when in reality it was dark and gray, where Sarah seems to disassociate herself from her scheming alter-ego, as if it were someone else and not her. It was bizarre.

Read more“Thank you for showing me [the video] because, actually, I felt really sorry for her,” said Sarah referring to herself as she watched her behavior playback on a small screen in front of Oprah.

Another time she said, “I believe from this I freed Sarah from the treadmill of her life, really.” Isn’t that a twist?

The disassociations kept coming and coming. It was surreal.

When I watched Sarah, I didn’t see a person who was sorry for her actions. I saw a woman who was trying to convince us all that, well, yeah, she messed up, but it was due to drinking, too much traveling, abuse, self-loathing, and whatnot. The excuses kept coming…

“I think I was so out of control with desperation to the point where I’d reached no return of helping my friend with the $40,000. Sort of out of my mind,” said Sarah to Oprah.

Sort of out of her mind? She is clearly hedging, saying wisps of what she knows she should, but she can’t quite claim it. I wondered, at times, too, if she was under the influence of something, because she didn’t even speak coherently. Could she have a drug problem of sorts?

“All I can know is that it happened and now I have got to go forward. Find a way forward as Sarah,” said the Duchess.

If that doesn’t hone us into what is important to Sarah, I don’t know what will: At the end of the day, it isn’t regret or remorse for her actions or owning up to what drove her.

When Oprah asked her if she was drunk, she says no, but when Oprah asked her what she drank, she couldn’t recall if it was wine or OJ. Sarah knows what was influencing her, she just doesn’t want to say, like an addict protecting their vice. I was also tired hearing about these so-called “friends”. They were a convenient excuse, too. Her sincerity in this interview fell like a brick from the 10th floor.

Its one thing to make a mistake. We can all forgive people for poor decisions in times of desperation, but when people continually walk down that path of desperation and refuse to face the music or ask for help, and dig themselves deeper with loads of B.S., we owe it to them to say STOP.

Look and listen to what you said, Sarah. Listen, read and watch your denial. Hear your words of nonsense, because if you don’t, it will only compound your problems. From where I see you sitting right now, you are on the edge of a cliff. You can either turn around now and get help, or risk falling to desperately new lows that will make you remember this pillow Oprah gave as a gift that you failed to take.

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