Denver police are reviewing their response to the incident
A Denver woman who spent nearly 15
frantic minutes on the phone with a 911 dispatcher was killed Monday
night by a bullet to the head before help arrived.
The
gunshot was the last sound 911 dispatchers heard on their call with
Kristine Kirk, 44, which lasted for approximately 12 to 13 minutes, said
Denver police officer Raquel Lopez.
Kirk's husband, Richard,
47, was arrested on suspicion of first-degree murder, Lopez said. He
appeared in court Wednesday, waived his formal advisement, and will
remain in custody.
In her call to
911, Kirk said her husband was "talking about the end of the world and
he wanted her to shoot him," according to a probable cause statement
filed in the case. There was a gun in their house, Kirk said at the
beginning of the phone call, but it was locked in a safe.
As
the call went on, Kirk told the 911 dispatcher that her husband was
hallucinating, scaring their three young children, the court document
said. Then, when she saw her husband had gone to the safe and gotten the
gun, she started screaming. The sound of a single gunshot reverberated
on the call, and Kirk wasn't heard from again.
Officers,
who had initially been sent to the house on a domestic disturbance
call, were dispatched to the Kirks' at about 9:32 p.m. Richard Kirk was
arrested at 9:55 p.m.
Denver police are reviewing their response to the incident and investigating what took so long, Lopez said.
When
officers arrived, they found Kristine Kirk lying on the floor with an
apparent gunshot wound to the head. She was pronounced dead at the
scene.
Police are investigating
the possibility that Richard Kirk — who admitted to killing his wife on
his way to the police station, according to the probable cause statement
— took marijuana prior to the shooting.
Police response times have gotten longer in recent years, The Denver Post reported, with the Denver police chief blaming budget constraints that have prevented the city from hiring any new officers since 2008.
An
audit from the Denver auditor's office examining police response times
is expected to be finalized in June, looking at multiple factors that
could be contributing to the long response times, The Denver Post said.
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