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The first time I called 911 was actually to avoid being involved in/the victim of a crime.
I (~16m) was walking home very late at night with a friend, when a pickup truck passed us on the road, then suddenly pulled over blocking the sidewalk ~10m ahead of us.
4 guys got out and began to walk towards us rather aggressively.
I pulled out my phone and very loudly said 'Hey google, Dial 911'.
All 4 stopped in their tracks. My friend and I didn't stop; we walked around them and then their truck, and continued onto a path vehicles couldn't follow, then we took off running as soon as we had rounded the corner out of sight.
For the record; I learned that day, google assistant won't actually dial emergency numbers for you. (that may have changed, it's been a long time and I'm not going to play with testing that) I'm really glad this encounter didn't end poorly because apparently I hadn't actually called for help.
These days at least some voice assistants can do it, I've gotten 911 calls that way. Might depend on the phone and software version.
Also fall or accident detections from someone dropping their phones.
And some phones have a setting where it'll initiate a 911 call if you press the power button 5 times or something like that.
Always a good idea to take a few minutes to go through your phones settings to see which of these features you have turned on and whether you actually should have those turned on. You wouldn't believe the amount of butt dials we get.
Also a reminder that deactivated phones without service can still call 911, a lot of people give their old phones to little kids to play with and we get a lot of calls that way. And little kids sometimes say some wild stuff, so you might just get fire engines showing up at your house because a kid said some magic words and we have to err on the side of caution.
And since I'm on that topic now, every agency varies a bit. Until fairly recently where I work, we could ignore most butt dials if we didn't hear anything suspicious, but they recently changed that policy, so now as long as we have a decent location ping from your phone, we're dispatching officers to all of them and have to call them back. I don't think most of our departments put a whole lot of effort into trying to track people down, mostly they drive through the neighborhood looking for anything suspicious, and maybe try calling back themselves, but it's still kind of a waste of time in most cases.
At my agency though, if you call accidentally but stay on the line and confirm there's no emergency, we can still ignore it as long as we don't hear anything suspicious going on. The second you hang up though without making contact, we have to enter the call, and try calling you back.
Protip- if we call you back, you don't really have to answer or answer any questions if you do. But if you answer we have to try to verify your location, and if you give us that, a cops may still gonna come knocking at your door even if we tell them you said there was no emergency. Some cops and departments will take it at face value and disregard from there but it's out of our hands at that point.
You're not gonna get in trouble for an accidental call, it's not a big deal, I get dozens, maybe hundreds of them every day. But if you want to avoid the aggravation, either stay on the line or ignore any incoming calls.
Again, those policies will vary a bit from one agency to another, I can only speak for where I work.
the power button emergency mode is soo useless to me, I've only ever accedentaly used it and i can't turn it off on a Samsung device only change it from 112 to 911 to hopefully have it not call an emergency number in my country.