Car Into A Tree On Pheasant Run; Driver Unresponsive, Window Smashed In
At 09:05, Amherst PD radioed in a single-vehicle crash on Pheasant Run Road between Bear Haven Drive and Cascade Drive: "A car went into a tree. The driver is not out of the vehicle and appears unresponsive."[1] Amherst Fire dispatch put the address at 124 Pheasant Run Road a moment later[2] and toned out Ellicott Creek 95 to respond.[3] Six minutes in, the on-scene officer asked dispatch the question that defines this kind of call: "22, am I clear to smash the window?"[4] The driver was reported still unresponsive[5] and then, crucially, "Radio, she is breathing."[6] No further escalation was broadcast in the window; the call appears to have transitioned to medical transport.
Weapon Call At St. Peter & Paul School Brings Williamsville Fire
Amherst Fire dispatch toned out Williamsville and EMS at 08:21 to "St. Peter and Pulse School, 5480 Main Street"[7] — a transcription mangling of SS Peter & Paul School, the Catholic K–8 in the heart of the village — with the disposition "be in the main office for a 27-year-old male with a weapon."[8] Williamsville 4 was put en route to 5480 Main with a 242 from the 290 in main.[9] The call ran on Amherst Fire frequency rather than Amherst PD's, which suggests an EMS-led response with police staging — consistent with a self-harm or mental-hygiene threat at the school office rather than a violent incident in the building. No additional escalation, lockdown traffic, or PD volume followed in the window monitored, suggesting the situation closed without confrontation.
Mood-Stabilizer Call Goes Sideways; Subject Out The Back On Foot
An Amherst PD officer told dispatch at 09:23 that "the 21-year-old male subject took some mood-stabilizer pills" and that the caller said he "spit some of them out."[10] Twin City Ambulance was staged off-scene; the officer added "he's currently in the kitchen damaging it"[11] and then, in the same breath, "no weapons as of now."[12] Eight minutes later the call inverted on itself: the subject — given the on-air name Virgis, a possible match for a name that Whisper has mangled — "took off on foot out the back" in a red hoodie.[13] Officers transitioned from negotiation to a foot search; no apprehension was confirmed in the window.
Smoke Detector Pings Community Bank Break Room
Amherst Fire dispatch toned out a commercial fire alarm activation at 3150 Sheridan Drive at Community Bank, between Alberta and Carmen, at 11:16, with the cause logged as "basement break room smoke detector activation."[14] Routine on its face; the back-room coffeepot once again shoulders the load.
Caller Says A Neighbor Stole Her Cat — And She'll Point Out The Apartment
An Amherst dispatcher relayed the only domestic dispute of the window that involved a feline as the disputed asset. A unit was sent to "Department 400B Boy" with the explanation: "Our caller thinks someone stole her cat and she'll point out the apartment where the cat is now."[15] The radio went quiet on the matter immediately afterward. The cat's name, criminal history, and political affiliations remain unknown.
Resident Trapped In Driveway By Doberman; Officers Identify A German Shepherd Named Bill Berman
Amherst PD radioed at 14:14 that they had "animal loose at 3930 Run. The resident said she can't get out of her car because there's a Doberman in her driveway and she can point out where it lives nearby."[16] A nearby officer offered: "If anybody's closer, the dog lives at 71 Surrey Run."[17] Twelve minutes later, a follow-up: the homeowner contacted at 71 Surrey Run "said it's not his dog, nor is he aware of any other Dobermans in the area, though there is a German Shepherd that lives on Hunter's Lane."[18] The arc closed with one of the great sentences of the day: "It's probably going to be the guy, however, Bill Berman was leashed the entire time I saw, so I'm going to head and speak to the complainant."[19] Bill Berman, presumed German Shepherd, presumed innocent.
Walden Galleria Security: "He Has To Go Home"
WGM Security — the radio handle for guards at the Walden Galleria — spent the lunch hour identifying an unwanted patron in the food court and discreetly broadcasting a status report. "10-40, he was yelling and screaming, and he's making the patrons uncomfortable."[20] Then, with the finality of a verdict: "He has to go home."[21] No further description was given of the patron, the grievance, or the menu they were prevented from completing.
"Tan, Shabby Trailblazer" Hits Vehicle In Boulevard Mall Lot, Drives Off
Amherst PD logged a hit-and-run at 1569 Niagara Falls Boulevard — the Boulevard Mall corridor — involving a "tan, shabby Trailblazer at the front of the store"[22] with a witness who supplied a plate that was no good.[23] Confirmed hit-and-run a moment later: "That's affirmative."[24] A shabby Trailblazer is one of the more honest vehicle descriptions the Post has fielded.
Driver's Door Partially Open, Going Slow On The 290
An Amherst PD officer started the morning with a tone-poem of a tip: "From the 290 westbound near the 990, there's a dark blue sedan with an elderly male driver going far under the speed limit with the driver's door partially open."[25] No further sightings were broadcast; we choose to believe he made it home.
Trevor, You Still Got That Duct Tape On You?
From the channel ProScan logs as BuffaloLimo — whose afternoon traffic includes plate runs, named units (Trevor, Greg, Joe, Kenneth), DMV checks, and walking searches at "83 Ellis Drive, two houses down from the school entrance" — one operator asked, with the casual tone of a man who knows how a shift is going to end: "Trevor, you still got that duct tape on you?"[26] The radio context strongly suggests transit-property security rather than literal limousine work; the duct tape, the radio context did not explain.
USCG Marine Broadcast: "Fireworks Destroyed. Waterloo Destroyed."
The Marine 22A-1022 weather broadcast, normally a wind-and-wave litany covering Lake Erie and the Niagara River, briefly turned into a Cormac McCarthy chapter heading at 10:59: "Fireworks destroyed. Waterloo destroyed."[27] Context (a follow-on transmission about a May 23 event) suggests a destroyed–notice retraction. The line stands on its own.
Possible Structure Fire Reported At 31 Lindbergh Drive
Tonawanda Fire dispatch toned out a possible structure fire at 31 Lindbergh Drive at 09:58, with the dispatcher correcting an initial "Lindbrook" to "Lindbergh" mid-broadcast[28] and a caller "reporting she can see smoke from the back of the house."[29] Tonawanda dispatch later noted units were "waiting for the homeowner to get off the station"[30] and at 10:26 placed all units back in service[31] — consistent with a non-working fire that resolved without escalation.
Working Structure Fire Toned Out At 1685 Meadow Drive
Lancaster Fire dispatch first reported a possible structure fire at 1685 Meadow Drive at 10:46, "smoke and the smell of fire coming from" the address.[32] Three minutes later, East Alden Fire upgraded to a "possible working structure fire 1685 Meadow Drive Jameson Road, request for your number six to stand by."[33] No mutual-aid traffic from outside agencies followed in the captured window; the call appears to have stayed within local Alden response.