A woman who received a desperate text from her husband indicating that he had been taken hostage on Tuesday said that she called emergency services, but police did not respond until about an hour later, by which time he had been shot and killed.
On its online police blotter, the Colorado Springs Police Department said that it found two deceased adult males on Friday at the location that Talija Campbell said she feared her husband, Qualin Campbell, was being held captive by another man.
Officers responded to a report of a shooting there at 2:09pm, the department said.
Talija Campbell said she called police just after 1pm, when her husband, a father of two, texted his location and a photograph of a man sitting next to him in his car.
Then he sent messages saying “911” and “Send Please!”
She called the emergency number.
Talija Campbell said she told one dispatcher that she believed her husband had been taken hostage, described his car and his location, which was about 2km from the headquarters of the Colorado Springs Police Department.
She was then transferred to a dispatcher responsible for taking calls from Colorado Springs.
The first dispatcher briefed the second dispatcher on what Talija Campbell reported, she said.
She said she explained what she knew again to the second dispatcher.
The second dispatcher said that an officer would check it out and get back to her, but there was no sense of urgency, Talija Campbell said, so she drove to the location herself.
When she arrived, Talija Campbell said she immediately recognized her husband’s company car in a parking lot.
She said that when she saw her husband slumped over inside the car alongside another man, she fell to her knees and started screaming.
As other people gathered around, they debated whether they should open the car door after seeing a gun on the lap of the other man, who appeared to be unconscious, but did not have any visible injuries, she said.
Talija Campbell said she decided to open the door to try to save her husband, who had been bleeding, but found no pulse on his neck or wrist.
“I shouldn’t have been the one there, the first person to respond,” she said.
She said her husband’s uncle, who also went to the scene, called police to report that Qualin Campbell was dead.
When asked about the emergency call by Talija Campbell and the police response to the situation, police spokesman Robert Tornabene said that he could not comment because there was an “open and active criminal investigation” into the deaths.
Talija Campbell’s lawyer, Harry Daniels, said that she wants answers from the department about why it did not respond to her call, saying Qualin Campbell might still be alive if they had.
“I can’t think of anything that could take higher precedence than a hostage situation, except maybe an active shooter,” Daniels said.
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