I'd
Call Mary-Kate Olsen First, Too
by
J.
H. Huebert
by J. H. Huebert
DIGG THIS
The gutter
press is desperate to turn Heath Ledger's death into a sex scandal
rather than a mere sad accident.
Thus, the gossip
writers remind us again and again that Diana Lee Wolozin – the masseuse
who found Mr. Ledger's body – used Ledger's cell phone to call his
friend Mary-Kate Olsen several times before she called 911.
The implication
of this – the UK's Telegraph tells us in so many words –
is supposed to be that if only Ms. Wolozin had not "wasted time"
calling the former infant star of Full House instead of 911, then
Mr. Ledger might still be alive.
But even if
she had dialed 911 first and paramedics had come immediately, that
would be a dubious allegation. Mr. Ledger is estimated to have died
some twenty minutes before his masseuse arrived – so the chances
of him being revived were slim indeed.
In
any event, Ms. Wolozin may have had sound reasons to call Ms. Olsen
rather than 911, thanks to government policies that tend to discourage
anyone from calling 911.
For one, there's
the fact that calling 911 doesn't necessarily bring the fastest
results – and doesn't guarantee any results.
As Richard
W. Stevens's book Dial
911 and Die illustrates with example after example, countless
people have been killed by violent criminals because they relied
on 911 instead of taking matters into their own hands with a firearm.
When you dial
911, police and paramedics are free to ignore your pleas. If they
dawdle or choose not to come at all, they won't be held liable.
California's Supreme Court has said
so in as many words, as have other courts. The U.S. Supreme
Court has held
that you have no individual right to police protection (let alone
help from the paramedics) even though you pay taxes and even though
protection of your life is the main theoretical justification for
government's existence.
When Ms. Olsen
received the masseuse's call, she immediately sent her own private
security team to Ledger's apartment. Press accounts leave the precise
timeline murky, but there is no question that Ms. Olsen's private
team arrived on the scene at least as soon as, and maybe even before,
the 911-dispatched team. Unfortunately, Mr. Ledger died anyway –
but this still illustrates that the choice to call for private help
first wasn't unreasonable.
Another reason
why Ms. Wolozin may have been reluctant to call 911 is because that
would necessarily involve a surrender of her client's privacy, an
issue about which celebrities like Mr. Ledger are understandably
highly sensitive. Calling 911 makes the details of your emergency
– possibly every word you say in an extremely stressful situation
– a public record, subject to endless radio and TV broadcasts. Reports
say Ms. Wolozin thought Mr. Ledger was unconscious, not dead – so
it's quite reasonable that she wouldn't have wanted him to come
to and find himself embroiled in a tabloid scandal thanks to her
911-tape blabbing.
People also
might not be eager to call 911 because it may cause them to be prosecuted
for some victimless crime.
For example,
Mr. Ledger's bedroom apparently was strewn with various pills. We
still don't know (and I don't much care) why Mr. Ledger had the
pills. Ms. Wolozin likely didn't know either. Under Supreme Court
precedent, anything the authorities see in plain view in your house
is subject to seizure without a warrant and can be used against
you. So we can understand why many people who have an emergency
related to illegal drugs would be reluctant to call for government
help – and how needless death could result from this.
Incidentally,
Ms. Wolozin allegedly was a victimless criminal, too: as the sharp
legal minds at US magazine inform us, Ms. Wolozin apparently
lacked a license to be a professional masseuse, which is a felony
in New York. That is, of course, ridiculous. You don't need such
a license under California law, and amateur massage-giving runs
rampant in California, New York, and everywhere else with few fatal
results. New York's law exists only to benefit established massage-givers
at the expense of would-be competitors – and now gives Ms. Wolozin
one more headache, thanks to US, which dutifully notified
the authorities of her alleged infraction.
The gossip
rags' attempts to smear and destroy Ms. Wolozin because of her reaction
under tragic circumstances are exceptionally unfair and mean-spirited,
even by their already-low standards.
Moreover,
the idea that calling 911 first is always the right answer is simple-minded
and, in some situations, could prove deadly. This is not to say
that you shouldn't call 911 in a life-threatening emergency
– but you can't count on it to save you, either. And thanks to government's
ever-increasing intrusions on voluntary, victimless conduct, it
might cause you even more problems than you had in the first place.
So it's best to be prepared to respond to emergencies in alternative
ways, in addition to calling 911.
As for me,
if I knew Mary-Kate Olsen and my life was on the line, I'd call
her first, too.
February 2, 2008
J.
H. Huebert [send him mail]
an attorney and an adjunct faculty member of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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