Part 3 The Vanished Podcast Transcript from July 30, 2016 - Where Is Noah Davis?



July 30, 2016 

The Vanished Podcast Transcript

Part 3

http://www.thevanishedpodcast.com/episodes/2016/7/30/bonus-noah-davis-part-3 

Admin Notes are in bold red


Speaker 1: 35 Catoose 15-23. 40, where are you at? Josh is rather angry.

Marissa Jones: Hey everyone. If you are in the Facebook group or on Twitter, you know that Josh and I recorded a third part this week, due to certain events that happened. I'm releasing this as bonus content for everyone. It will not be like a regular episode. It is just a conversation between Josh and I. It is very minimally edited. I took out some things due to privacy issues. Also, I felt that some things should not be released publicly at this point. In this bonus episode, you will hear about Josh's trip to the FBI, where he was given a polygraph, and unfortunately his mother Janice, who you heard on Episode 37, passed away the following day. We will also go over some other things, such as questions from listeners, my call into Sheriff's Talk, and an email that I got from the sheriff's department. Due to the sensitive nature of the subject matter, I did not edit Josh down so, this is pretty long. I would like to thank everyone who has reached out to support Josh over the past few days. So with that, here you go.

Marissa Jones: Hey Josh, how you doing?


Joshua Wright: I've had better days. Had better days.


Marissa Jones: So, there's a few things that I wanted to go over, to update people. Things that happened this week.


Joshua Wright: Okay.


Marissa Jones: Do you want to start with what happened on Monday?


Joshua Wright: No. I'd rather start by first thanking everybody. Any of your listeners that hear this or have heard the other shows. Their outpour of support has been pretty awesome actually. I haven't been able to respond to them all, and yesterday I didn't respond to anybody but, I was watching just everybody just discuss it, and care, and talk about it. It was pretty awesome so, I want to make sure, if I can do it all in once, in one reply, it's on this. I want to thank everyone for caring like they have.


Marissa Jones: The listeners are great.


Joshua Wright: Yeah. They have been. Especially with the Sheriff's Talk. I normally would have been right on that, and calling in with them even but, I disconnected yesterday. But, it was pretty cool, for the first time ever to see someone take the weight off my shoulders and kind of run with it for me. That was kind of exactly what y'all were doing so, that was pretty surreal, really, is the best way.


Marissa Jones: Yeah. Well, we all know that right now you have other things that you need to focus on, but we wanted to carry on that torch for you, while you're dealing with what you need to deal with.


Joshua Wright: I appreciate it. It seems like that would be the normal thought from the normal person but, around here, you wouldn't see that. I've almost, in regards to the Sheriff's Talk program, I thought I was gonna have to pay people to call into that thing. You see from the videos, that occasionally someone would call in but, I wouldn't say they're just afraid. They're just ... I don't know. It just seems like people get scared to death to call in and talk.


Marissa Jones: Do you remember when we were gonna call in before, and I had you on the line because I was too scared to do it by myself?


Joshua Wright: Then show ended abruptly?


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: Yeah.


Marissa Jones: But, I did it all by myself last night.


Joshua Wright: I wish I could have heard it.


Marissa Jones: I know. I recorded it. But for some reason, it only recorded the video, and didn't record the audio. I'm so mad.


Joshua Wright: I will say that, Sheriff Wilson ... By the way, that sheriff, he's the sheriff of the other county, that's our neighboring county, Walker County. He's a good man. He really is. He's a good sheriff too. I don't really have any problems with him. As I said, it's not even his case or whatever but, he's had to deal with me on one little part of it. But, I've never had any issues out of Sheriff Wilson. He'll contact me back if I write him and so forth. He's even the president of the Georgia Sheriff's Association. He's actually a good sheriff. So, even if it's just him next week or whatever, I don't care. Still, call in. But, that man in particular, I don't have any issues with. He's a good man.


Marissa Jones: The other guy, they said he was at some ball or something.


Joshua Wright: I bet he was. He could have at least reached out to me yesterday, or the day before. He didn't. As some of you may have heard, his wife did. I shared some dispatch traffic. Maybe you could throw that in here.


Marissa Jones: Okay.


Joshua Wright: I wouldn't mind. I edited out the dead air on it but it's about 30 minutes total. Packed it down and subtracting the dead air to about, what, three minutes or two minutes in sound. It's quite interesting. I got angry apparently according to the lady going over the air, because it took 30 minutes for responders to show up.


Marissa Jones: Josh, some of these ... okay, a lot of people have listened to your episodes, okay? So I think you need to explain what you're talking about here because people don't know.


Joshua Wright: Well I don't believe I shared that with the group, that audio.


Marissa Jones: No, no, no, people listening don't even know what you're talking about in regards to your mother.


Joshua Wright: Oh, well Wednesday ... I'll just tell the story real quick. Wednesday I got awoke, I've been living at home with my daughter because we moved back home for a couple years now because of her health going down. I brought my daughter back, I call it home, home here with me.

Joshua Wright: For a lot of reasons too my mom could be here and was disabled, didn't drive. I work all hours of the day and I had an anytime babysitter also. But she kind of needed in home care at times when she would hit her worst moments. So me and my stepdad, her husband, have been able to, you know, work together on that. Anyhow, even when mom was sick at her worst it was very difficult to tell.

Joshua Wright: Me and my daughter woke up because she had fell asleep on me on Wednesday morning about seven o'clock. We woke up on our own, and about two minutes after we woke up my step dad pushes the door open and says "Josh", he's on the phone already I can see, "Josh, come in here and help me, I can't seem to wake your mom up". Of course I looked at Kayleigh real quick and I jumped in there.



Admin Note: His daughter fell asleep on him at 7 am the morning his mother was found dead? Which means Joshua had to have been awake when his mother was awake?



Joshua Wright: As soon as I jumped onto the bed, I see her. When I jumped onto the bed I kinda leaped on top of her on the bed and there was no movement. My next thing that I did there was I smacked her. Of course, I'm going "Momma, momma!". I smacked her again very hard, I'm not gonna lie, and there was no response. I said "Oh, God", stuck my head towards her nose very close to her face to listen for breathing. There wasn't any, and I picked her up and laid her down onto the floor because the bed is a very soft bed, a big thick comforter and I wouldn't have been able to get her flat on this bed of course. So I had to pick her up and I laid her flat.



Admin Note: So if there are any marks on her, it's because he jumped on her and slapped her really hard. It's not because she was murdered or anything like that.



Joshua Wright: I could also smell oats because she had gotten up like she would always do in the middle of the night to get something sweet. I could tell that was what had happened kind of right away. She had food still in her mouth, and so I had to uplift her jaw and stick my fingers into her throat and remove all the food that was in there. Her airway became clear at that point because I gave her real slow breaths and seen her chest lift up. I began CPR. Of course, I'm not like ... the way I'm describing it I sound like some sort of perfect moving robot or something, but I'm also screaming out loud expletives, you know, screaming like "what the hell, no momma". There's a jewelry box beside me in the middle of the floor, I done punched it.



Admin Note: So Janice gets up in the middle of the night to eat oats, then lays back in bed with oats still in her mouth and dies? But didn't Joshua just say he didn't go to sleep until 7am that morning? Which means Joshua was awake when his mother got up to eat oats?



Joshua Wright: I'm doing CPR correctly, going down six inches or whatever and all that. Last time I remember having a class it was about two breaths for a minutes worth of compressions. I'm doing it about that rate, and my stepdad is standing over on the phone. He kept asking me questions and I kept ignoring him. I remember yelling at him because I looked up and my daughter was still watching. I said "Mike get..." That's his name, Mike. "Mike, move her out of the way or tell her to go somewhere else." And he didn't do it. So I had to scream at my daughter in a mean way, which I regretted and I still regret, "Kayleigh go to your damn room now!" Like that and she took off crying about it because she was just watching. Hell no, hell no, I couldn't have her watching. So I had to scare her to kind of get her to go away.

Joshua Wright: Then you know he continued to ask me questions, which I knew was from the dispatch over the phone. I didn't answer nothing, like "Tell them to hurry the hell up, it'd be nice I'm sweating doing this". I'm not in a panic, I'm doing correct CPR, but verbally I'm pissed because it's taking so long.

Joshua Wright: Next thing I know, about 25 minutes have passed so far. Seriously, I'm doing it for about 20-25 minutes. When they finally show up, I noticed they were here, that it's a firetruck first. These three firefighters start tiptoeing in like burglars, looking like snapping their gloves on. They look over and they make eye contact with me and they don't change their motions. I know they had to figure out where we were, but once they seen me ... I look at them and they see me, and they're still tiptoeing, and I just stop. Threw my hands up like, come on God dang, you know, what the hell. Get over here and do your damn job, it's thirty minutes. I'm getting kinda ... you know, that's when it hit me. I figured I shouldn't have to tell them what to do.

Joshua Wright: Finally they come over there, because I was done. I was sweating. As soon as they came over there and they took over, I screamed in the house like, "Fuck." I knew what was going on at that point. I go outside and Kayleigh met me. We went outside and I sat in the yard and I start rocking her, we're both crying.

Joshua Wright: I noticed the ambulance shows up, finally, and this guy jumps out the passenger seat. I didn't even see the driver get out yet. He pops open his side box and he's putting his sunglasses on his head and shuts that side box and opens up another side box. I set Kayleigh down and I stood up, I said "Dude", I'm waving my arms like you would a race or something, in a circular motion and pointing with my other hand like "how about moving it and stepping it the hell up".

Joshua Wright: That's when I got what, I guess, was visibly angry, because from then on I'm cussing just about anytime I'm talking to anybody. This police officer shows up, and I look back and it's the sheriff's wife. I know that it's the sheriff's wife because she's the only female in, I guess the entire world that her hair can be down and touch the collar of her uniform, and that's a no-no by the way. Any police you always see that are female always have their put up and pinned up or whatever. But she just wears her hair however she wants.


Marissa Jones: Josh, she's the sheriff's wife, come on.


Joshua Wright: Yeah, they're also not supposed to work underneath someone that's their husband. I think she's technically supposed to be like a school resource officer or something, because she's not supposed to work under the sheriff. That's her husband, that's a conflict of interest.

Joshua Wright: But she asked, "Where's Kayleigh?". In my arms, clearly, is where Kayleigh is. She goes "Well damn, Josh, calm down a little bit". I said, "No, I don't have to". And that's when I guess she went over the air, come to find out later, and asked where the hell everybody else was because I was angry. I stand up, and I'm walking. Maybe she was the one at Kayleigh's school, I'm not sure. Kayleigh is my daughter's name. They seemed to know each other for a second because they talked.

Joshua Wright: As I walked off and I looked down my phone starts to ring and it's my dad. My dad, you know they're not together or course, but ... the only reason I know that my dad would call is because, just traffic has went out over the air, meaning like from dispatch. They're talking about it over, Catoosa county is calling all these units and stuff. My stepbrother is a Catoosa county deputy, and he must have caught wind of it from listening. He's also like a supervisor and trainee, he must have heard that and called my dad.

Joshua Wright: So when I answered the phone, it's my dad, and nothing against my dad, but he goes "Son, this is the call I would have never wanted to make". I said "Dad, she's still in the fucking driveway". I hung up the phone with my dad, and as I just did that I hear a slow moving engine coming up on my side and I looked. I knew it was going to be my stepbrother, and it was. He didn't show up as a cop, he showed up as a stepbrother. He got out and he was hugging me.

Joshua Wright: We walked down to the car because I was gonna go ahead and crank it, I'm thinking they're fixing to leave in this ambulance. I reach in there to crank my damn car, battery is dead. I said man this fucking ... I'm gonna need a jump apparently. I remember I'm looking over with my peripheral on my left and there's about nine cops there at this point, just standing there and they're just staring at me. I said "What the fuck is everybody looking at?". They jumped when I said it like that too because I guess they don't expect to get cussed at much.

Joshua Wright: Now I didn't understand why they all had to be there. They all recognized ... when you hear this audio, which I permit you to do, you'll hear as soon as they announce our address over the air a cop wants confirmation on the address because it's a pretty well known address only because they know of me, not because of trouble.



Admin Note: Audio of dispatch that Joshua Wright recorded then posted on Facebook less than 24 hours after his mother died. https://youtu.be/MIx_fGuBBe0



Marissa Jones: Have you had to call 9-1-1 because of your mom before?


Joshua Wright: No.


Marissa Jones: No?


Joshua Wright: I didn't call them, again my stepdad did. But no ... Yeah, but there was a lot. Way too many there. I look over and my stepbrother, his name's Matt, he said "Josh what's bout to happen here, is I guess this coroner is gonna show up and they're gonna try and ...". I said "Matt how about they get her the fuck out of the driveway first, you know what I'm saying. Why is she still here?". I see her coming out on the stretcher at that point, they had the things hooked up to her. They made eye contact with me. So when they get her down our steps they finally resume CPR, I guess because I was looking. I don't know, but ... When they put her in the ambulance they sat in the damn driveway forever, but I noticed Matt had already given those officers an order.


Marissa Jones: Who's Matt?


Joshua Wright: My stepbrother, the cop. Told them to boost my car off for me I guess. Because I look over there and they're boosting it off with my jumper cables. After that I made notifications. I called my uncle who lives right down the road. The same uncle that picked me up from jail that one time, so forth. I called him and he goes "what, you're waking me up?". I said "Good, get up here. Your sister, she's not doing well. Police and everybody up here are saying, they're talking like she's gone.". He said "I'm on my way". He came up here and then I called my brother next. I have a full brother, Chase. I called him next, and he met me at the hospital. Of course, when I called him and got off the phone with him and told him, he headed that way. It still was like 15 minutes before they even left the driveway and I waited on them of course because I didn't want to leave my mom.

Joshua Wright: Once we finally got up there me and Kayleigh ... they even gave us an emergency escort, by that I mean Matt rode in front of me with his lights on so I could haul ass. But by the time we got there, we go in the back room and they meet me over there pretty quickly and say that they couldn't restart her heart. So she had passed away.


Marissa Jones: How's Kayleigh doing?


Joshua Wright: At first she takes everything like ... She probably will, not like she's hiding it, but she's nine years old, but she's got a bad habit of taking things way too adult level like. Meaning that she sees a lot of things, especially from what I took her from, and she's just very adult like on it. "Dad I'm okay, are you okay? Are you okay? Are you okay?". But she was very tired. It had shook her up so much where she was sleepy because when I held her in this room after they had told us that she had fell right back asleep. I made plans, I text someone that has custody of her brother and sister, when I got custody of her they took custody of the other kids in the house.

Joshua Wright: I made arrangements for her to go there and gave her a heads up to make sure if Kayleigh wants to talk, let her talk because I'm going to talk to her too but she may feel more comfortable talking to a female. I've always known that, and they have that kind of relationship. Make sure if she wants to talk, let her talk because I don't want it to traumatize her or anything. Her and my mom were very close, of course. I knew that from day one. I wanted them to be, really. I even named Kayleigh after my mom, her middle name is my mom's middle name. They've been pretty close. I bet it's not really hit her just yet because she's not really aware of the difference it's gonna be.

Joshua Wright: The difference in her life is gonna be pretty obvious. There's gonna be a huge absence there. We're gonna have a drastic change in our lives too. I've even been here these last two days and I woke up yesterday in a quiet house. It's very, I wouldn't say eerie, but kind of that. I was gonna get up and do things that I was needing to do like clean the house, and get everything ready, my mom was always big on that, having a clean house. But we've got family coming in from Ohio and Florida. I want the house to look decent like my mom would want to have. I tried to wake up yesterday and I felt like it was God saying no, you need to just set there and rest. So I didn't even get up yesterday. I just stayed laying down and slept most of the day. I checked on Kayleigh once via text, but I didn't even ... I was disconnected from her even. I just didn't want to move.


Marissa Jones: How are you doing today?


Joshua Wright: I feel like its still not hit me totally yet.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: But I feel a little bit more today when I woke up that time to assume the role that I'm in as the oldest son and the big brother. I've got some things to take care of kind of role. I have to man up a little bit today and do that, so I woke up with that mentality. Little things are still ... The note that my mom left my stepdad to wake her up is still on the counter right now. For example like stuff like that. I just went into the kitchen earlier and I looked over and I seen it and I was like, "Fuck man I can't see this stuff right now."

Joshua Wright: I almost wished like I had a wife or a female or something that would help me come over here and get this all cleaned up because there's going to be a lot, hell every little knick knack in here is something she's hung up on the wall. It's hard to look at right now.

Joshua Wright: It's a ... And we got a lot of questions, I'm gonna go to the sheriff's department here in a minute. Apparently her autopsy is done. Apparently, my uncle told me this. So I'm gonna go check and see if that means her body is on its way back. Stuff like that.


Marissa Jones: You said they sent her body to Atlanta, correct?


Joshua Wright: Yeah, yeah.


Marissa Jones: How far away from you is that?


Joshua Wright: An hour and 40 minutes.


Marissa Jones: You know, you just said something. You said that you have to man up, and can I just tell you that I hate that term. It implies that you're not allowed to grieve on the same level as a woman or something.


Joshua Wright: Well technically I'm not.


Marissa Jones: Well, I know but it's like something that society puts on men, and I just don't like it.


Joshua Wright: Well, that was the best descriptive term I had.


Marissa Jones: Well, I'm not saying that you ...


Joshua Wright: Yeah I get what you're saying. It's kind of gender specific, meaning like if you womened up it wouldn't be the same thing.


Marissa Jones: Well to me it just like you deserve time to grieve. You deserve that.


Joshua Wright: I agree. If I had a wife or something like that it would be a little bit different. You would know that someone's taking care of that type of thing for me. In my situation right now that doesn't exist. That doesn't exist so that's why I have to. Because otherwise this family is gonna show up and see a mess and my mom would be so mad at me.


Marissa Jones: Yeah. How's your brother doing?


Joshua Wright: My brother is a very quiet person. So he's definitely kind of quiet. He's here is I need him kind of in a strange way, he's a little distant. I don't mean that to sound bad, he's just different than me. He wouldn't normally be up to discussing this with anyone else and things like that, but I don't know if its therapeutic for me or whatever it is. But I'm open to do that because I'm pretty transparent anyhow. But discussing it is something that I don't have an issue with doing.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: He's just not a talker. He sent me a text picture of the house that we grew up in. He went by there and said I had to come up ... this is what the message said, it was the picture of that house, he said "I had to go back over here for a while". He sent that to me, but he's back at work right now.


Marissa Jones: Did he listen to the episodes?


Joshua Wright: I don't know. I know his wife did. He's married.


Marissa Jones: Do you want to mention something, we discussed this, about Steve listened to the episodes?



Admin Note: "Steve" is Bobby Joe Rogers



Joshua Wright: Yeah, I'm fine with that.


Marissa Jones: Or do you not want to mention it?


Joshua Wright: I don't care. He apparently did, he did because the people reaching out to him and apparently put him on the hot seat and asked him a billion questions and stuff. He started blowing me up on Wednesday after being aware that my mom had passed and everything, in a harassing kind of way where he was kind of making fun of me. Kind of picking at me, and kind of being I guess you could say bully like. He wouldn't shut his mouth, he just kept on. He said that ... messages just like this is just a big effing game to you and I think you need to talk about it ... You need to fix this shit, I'm going to press charges, and this that and the other. I was like dude if you don't mind I'm not even looking for my brother today, because I wasn't. I wasn't, as weird as that sounds. I said I'm not looking for my brother today, I'm not even looking to talk to anybody in particular today, but I would like a moment to grieve my mom has passed away. If you could just give me that please, we'll talk tomorrow maybe.

He's like no you need to talk to me now. He kept on and on and on, he just started really wouldn't quit cussing me and so forth. But he did say that he had heard the podcasts. That doesn't bother me or scare me or nothing, but his lack of empathy did. In the sense where he had no ... Honestly it's just all the more things that make him appear to be a person with rage inside. Honestly he seemed to have rage when I was at that moment in my life, and he still had rage, and that's a great point to me. Apparently he ... Death doesn't mean anything to him.


Marissa Jones: Yeah, sounds like a great guy.


Joshua Wright: Well...


Marissa Jones: I'm being sarcastic.


Joshua Wright: Yeah. It just didn't seem like it to me. I had to block him in hallways. And honestly the last few things that he said to me pissed me off so much I went down to the sheriffs. I needed my time and he wasn't allowing that. They said "Oh, absolutely, we'll make sure we let him know". He had threatened to go down to the sheriffs department and press charges or whatever you want to call it. Of course as I can see from that it was news to them. He was just running off at the mouth.

It was there also while I was there, because I went down there and I was livid. I was pretty quietly pissed off. If you'd seen me you would know I was pissed, but I wasn't talking. If you seen me in the lobby, oh he's mad. You would know that I was mad, clearly. And they knew who I was when I walked in. As you can tell from the dispatch traffic they referred to me by my first name only. Apparently everybody knows who I am.

When I walked in there, they got ... you know normally, I've said it before, when I go in there, no one is ever there. I asked for one of the detectives, and looky there one was available. He came out. Honestly, he was very, very nice and empathetic to me. Let me know he has lost his mom and how he was sorry, and he had his arm around me and stuff. I was like "Man, that's fine I appreciate that". It was kinda shocking. I said "I appreciate that at least". He took me to this room, and he stayed that way too he was very nice I'm not gonna lie. It doesn't make anything better, but I'm just saying he was better that day. I let him know that about Steve. He also said that my mom's detective was there. The reason why my mom's detective now exists is because they had sent her for an autopsy so, he came in the house and got her medicine together and he wants to make sure there wasn't any kind of incorrectly prescribed medications and so forth. That's also why she's went for an autopsy.


Marissa Jones: Okay.


Joshua Wright: I'm my opinion there has been ... the doctors must not have known the recipe that she was taking and it's caused her to be in that drowsy of a state, that kind of thing. They had to send her off for that reason.


Marissa Jones: Do you mean that you think she was getting prescribed different medications from different doctors and they didn't know that she was taking all of that?


Joshua Wright: She wasn't doing anything wrong.


Marissa Jones: No I'm not saying that.


Joshua Wright: What I believe is that, yeah they're ... I mean, myself, I only get one prescription prescribed to me, and when that is entered into the computer, you know, she can check and see. Because she showed me, she's a pretty cool doctor. She can check and see if I'm going across the street to Dr. Smith's office ...

Marissa Jones: Yes they do that.


Joshua Wright: ... and see if I'm getting the same prescription. I don't believe ... My mom had mentioned that she had a new doctor. I don't believe this new doctor was aware of everything in totality, because she shouldn't have been that kind of groggy where she would have ... been in that state where she could choke on her own food like that.


Marissa Jones: Yeah, I get what you're saying. And I wasn't trying to say that ...


Joshua Wright: An autopsy will show that. Which I wasn't too thrilled about her having to go do that either. It'll show that. That's not a battle or anything I feel pending or nothing. But yeah absolutely if this doctor done something wrong he should be aware of it. I'm not mad at this doctor or whoever. And then I also had to make sure that they understood that my stepdad would never do anything to hurt my mom and stuff like that.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: So I had to give them a statement.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: Bless his heart too. My mom and him even normally would not spend the night. Like my mom would sleep on the couch, she was a night owl, and my stepdad not so much. He's a hard worker. So they would sleep separate most of the time. Just so happened to be they slept together that last night in the bed, which had to make him feel pretty good. He's grieving just like any of the rest of us, bless his heart. He's a very simple man, but he's a good man.


Marissa Jones: Now, do you want to discuss what happened on Monday?


Joshua Wright: Oh.


Marissa Jones: Was that Monday, or was that Tuesday?


Joshua Wright: Tuesday.


Marissa Jones: That was Tuesday.


Joshua Wright: Well it got my mom very worked up, so I can briefly mention that, sure why not.


Marissa Jones: Excuse me, it got me briefly worked up to.


Joshua Wright: Yeah. I went up to an FBI appointment, because I've been reaching out to the FBI for quite some time, I was kind of excited about this because I felt like "Oh man, this is kinda different." I never had any plans to follow back up with the FBI. They reached back out to me. I never even gave them my phone number or my address but they came and they knocked on our door. They looked me up and everything.

I go to the appointment at 10:30 at this FBI field office in Dalton, Georgia. The two agents, I'll say, were very nice to me when I got in there. And let me know that he had done some extra work and he's trying to get approval, or he could take over the case or whatever. They asked me if I wouldn't mind taking a polygraph with this polygraph guy that they had called in. I said no, and he explained to me why, they're pitching it to the US Attorney's office. In order for them to kind of take over, to see if they could, because that's what he was trying to mention. That he suggested that there's a possibility of state line being an issue and so forth and that he would like to be able to see if they can look into it. Therefore, part of that would be, he would like to be able to show me telling the truth and everything. Because I was pretty much their only source of information and they would like to be able to add this in there in this report when they submit it to him that I was this is a truthful guy or whatever.

I was like yeah absolutely, as soon as he said polygraph I said sure where's he at? Whatever, I don't mind a bit, and I still wouldn't because I'm honest about everything of course. So I go in there and meet this gentleman, I don't even remember his name. I don't know. But he set me up and read me rights and everything about it, that I could stop it anytime I needed to or whatever. Very complicated electric chair looking device. I had to put my feet down on these things and all this stuff. Every movement apparently gets, you know its not just a pulse reading type of things, although they had me hooked up to it too. My back, if I moved my back it detects that. If I move my feet it detects that. It was a very complicated little device.

He asked me only eight questions, three times, and then comes back after he says "let me go send this off real quick", and he comes back in there and says that pretty much I'd failed. I was like "Okay, failed what? Which one? What are you talking about?". I also informed him about my medication and everything, because I feel like if anything, and let's say this actual test did ... you know, the readings went haywire, who knows. If it does, it's because I believe that. The medication I take, it's just Adderall for ADHD, which I have no problems talking about, again I'm pretty open. It can get you worked up and dehydrated easily if you get worked up blood pressure wise and everything like that. And that's why I felt like it was a little bit relevant. Especially tense, and when something that has anxiety and everything like that involved in like something like my brother's case and all that.


Marissa Jones: Mm-hmm (affirmative).


Joshua Wright: And I'd mentioned it and he said it wouldn't matter, or whatever. I was like okay, it seemed like it kind of would because he made, for example, sit completely still in an uncomfortable kind of way. And even controlled my breathing in the sense for he didn't want me controlling my breathing but he needed me not to breath so quickly, he said. He said, "Calm your breathing down." And then he said, "Alright, now don't be controlling your breathing. It looks like you're ..." That kinda thing. And I was like "I don't understand what you're saying." And he was like, "Don't move your head." I'm like, "Alrighty buddy." And he said, "Try to sit still if you can". I am sitting still. He's like, "But your hands are moving a little bit." I'd made I think just a circle with my middle finger and my thumb. And I was trying to just ... Because he was being kind of rude about it. So I was like breathing in and breathing out to get myself in this little state where I would assume that a reading would look pretty flat or normal or whatever.

Anyhow, when he came back and said that I'd failed this whole thing, I was like, "Well, what do we need to do to figure out what's caused this? Because you can ask me in a million different other ways."


Marissa Jones: Hey Josh.


Joshua Wright: Yeah?


Marissa Jones: I hate to interrupt you but ... I'm sure you know this but I want to point it out for people who will listen to this. That they can tell you that you failed even if you didn't fail.


Joshua Wright: I remember saying that when I got ... because yeah, I hadn't gotten to that point yet. That seems like what they were doing if you want my opinion.


Marissa Jones: A couple episodes ago, in the Lisa Erwin episode, they told her mom that she failed a polygraph test. And then didn't reveal for years. And she even went out to the media and said she failed it. And so then the media took that and ran with it. And then years later, it came out that that was just a tactic to put her under pressure to try to get her to admit to something.


Joshua Wright: I felt like that was what this was when he came back and told me about it. In a sense that's why I allowed it to continue. But when he'd also came back and said that I'd failed it, it was at that moment where I'm thinking, "Shit. F it."

Sometimes I can predict things a little bit. Like almost as if I'm sitting there watching a script be you know enacted in front of my face. I felt like there was a possibility since it had gotten kind of odd for a second once he got rude about it. I felt like we'd walk out of this room and I would walk into two hand cuffs or something. Like I got that vibe and after ... I'm a explain to you how he kind of changed on me. He was being very polite except when I was getting wired in like I described. But when he came back and said I failed it, he goes, "Now let me tell you what I believe." I said, "Believe? What is what you believe have to do with anything?"

And he goes, "I believe that you had something to do with your brother and that you two must have gotten into a fight after you had gotten out and you lost control and had caused this to happen to your ..." I looked at him at that point, I said ... I don't want to curse too much in this episode.


Marissa Jones: It's okay.


Joshua Wright: I looked at him, I said, "Motherfucker, I was in jail for this entire time. Up until I think the 2nd of August." I said, "what you're saying is not possible because absolutely nobody in the world has any whereabouts or anything on my brother past July 28th at 9:17 p.m.



Admin Note: Joshua Wright got out of jail August 7, 2014, not August 2, 2014.



Joshua Wright: He said, "Well I've done some research on your case and I've looked at it and this is what I believe." And I said, "I just told you that shit's not possible." And he goes, "Well I think you lost control in a fight with your brother about the truck or whatever." And I was like, "I located my truck. Let me tell you something, I put my hands on thousands of people before and I've documented uses of forces was many, many, many people and I've never ever lost my cool, ever. And secondly, I came up here to the FBI looking for help. And if I had some sort of guilt or guilty conscience, what point would any of this make sense? Why would I continue to ..."say like this podcast for example. Why would I go out of my way to make the biggest fuss? To clear my conscience, he says.


Marissa Jones: Hmph.


Joshua Wright: I was like, "To clear my conscience?" Are you serious? I was like, "Well, hopefully this is some sort of tactic because I still felt like it was to ... you know, I was expecting him to say, "Well man, you didn't fail it, you passed." But I need to know for sure myself that you weren't telling me just a story on anything. Yeah it's made fidgeting for papers.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: I was going to read something. I got a file cabinet in front of that has some of my use of force reports in there. But I felt like that was going to be a tactic that he was doing here. But the ruder he got, he's like, "Well, that's not what I believe. And I feel like that's what happened here and I feel like you need to come clean." And I said, "I feel like I need a break. And you can unhook me from all this shit. And that's what I feel like." So I stepped out and I texted you, second person, I texted you and called you. Actually I called you.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: I called you then you-


Marissa Jones: I was at work.


Joshua Wright: And then you didn't answer. And then you said, "Is that you calling?" Instead of writing you back, I just hit call back.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: And you answered. And I was worked up, pissed off, crying even, mad.


Marissa Jones: Yeah. I was at work. So, I was like, "What's going on?" I didn't even realize where you were.


Joshua Wright: I told you. And you told you. And like that's how ... I was really let down, like hurt more because I felt like I was going to get some weight pulled off my shoulders. Like I was going to finally see some heroes, kind of thing. And it was really, really, and it still was as I'm thinking about it. That sucks that these people I thought were finally going to be helpful. Who's to say that they're not? I don't know. But it doesn't seem like it to me. If they're not and if this was a tactic, I'll still look at them in their face and say, "You need to straighten that shit up because that's bullshit. You don't need to torture people that are victims like that, kind of. And I was coming to you for help, you don't need to twist my buttons or push my buttons and do that type of thing to somebody." Because it's almost the kind of thing that would make me snap, being such a very critical issue with my life.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: It'd be like them coming to me today and telling me that they think they killed my mom or something. Just, no, how about fuck you? You know? Like that kind of thing. It's so offensive that you just want to hold up a middle finger in front of their face or something. Like, you're just out of your mind, leave me alone.



Admin Note: Odd that he would say that about killing his own mother. Also odd that he recorded the dispatch then posted it less than 24 hours after his mother died. https://youtu.be/MIx_fGuBBe0



Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: And after I got ahold of you and told you that ... I was letting you know because I felt like when I got done, I still knew that it was a little bit voluntary because I somehow was allowed to walk outside.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: I called my mom and told her and I also wanted to talk to Kayleigh because I felt like there was a slight chance I could go to jail or something stupid. So I talked to my daughter for a minute or so to tell her I love her and everything else. But my mom came up there. And my mom was not happy, she got worked up. This was the very last day she was alive.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: Come to find out. And she was very, very mad, angry, defensive about me. And she also had gotten really dressed up and looked very pretty. My mom looked very pretty. My uncle brought her up there. But let me get back to that in a second. I didn't know my mom was coming up there. But, anyhow, I went back in and of course he never changed on that. And he was getting very, almost dickhead like, over the top trying to make me get to a point where I would get visibly or physically upset. And the way I locked up on him on that way is that I just laid my head back and was just like, "Yeah man, yeah. Alright. I see that your stuck on this. It doesn't make any sense. No way to explain it. But sure buddy. Whatever. Are we going to wrap this up now?"

And he would start getting closer and closer and closer to me. Like he got about two to three inches away. I look down, this guy has got a pistol in his sock. And so I'm sitting there and I'm not looking threatened or anything. But I was like, "Dude, if you could back up from me it'd be great." I said, "I know you know, federal agent that you are, you're within my three foot reaction [area 00:42:20]." I pulled that out of my training. I said, "You're in my three foot reaction [area 00:42:24] and I'm kind of feeling threatened because you're being an asshole. You need to slide back." He goes, "What makes you threatened?" I said, "You got a pistol. That's one thing that makes you feel threatened." He goes, "Woo, yeah, you're going to be upset about that type of thing?" I was like, "Yeah! I didn't know I was coming in here to sit with a bully for another thing. Yeah. A lot of these things are upsetting me. But if you could slide back, it'd be great."

And he did it on purpose. Like he would keep his hands in my face and stuff like that and I just kept my hands down. The way I locked up on him was like everything he said, I was like, "Whatever dude."


Marissa Jones: Can I ask you a quick question?


Joshua Wright: Yeah.


Marissa Jones: Were you hooked up to the polygraph thing when you came back in? Or were you just talking to them?


Joshua Wright: No, but I still had all the things stuck to my skin from it.


Marissa Jones: Okay. Like electro type things?


Joshua Wright: Yeah. Yeah. And I almost didn't go all the way back into that little room. Like I came in at first and I asked for some water. And I sat down in the lobby and the agents were there too because I had to get cleared through a checkpoint again. He kept saying, "You ready to come back in here?" I said, "What's it matter where the fuck I sit at?" You know? Like what does that matter? I said, "I'm cooling down, you need to let me is my best advice to you." And I said, "When I go in there, I know they're watching on that camera above you on that ceiling. I don't care. What's it matter where I sit at? I'm cooling off and you need to let me. You've been highly offensive, I'm a little bit in shock."

Joshua Wright: So when I was done with that whole thing of water, which I did drink, I went in there and sat down. And like I said, he didn't let it go. And finally, I said, "Look dude, we're not getting anywhere. You're just going in circles. You can just stop talking to me at this point because apparently we're not going to get anywhere." He goes, "Well, you need another damn break man? Is that what you need? Are you going to get upset?" I said, "No I'm not going to get like you are, no. But, what I am going to do is, we're going to wrap this up now. It's not going to help either one of us to continue this." And he goes, "Well here's what you can do, you can take you another break and go on outside. But here, let me tell you this, don't come back inside unless you're going to tell me where your brothers body is." And I was like, "Are you for sure you're going to end it on that note? Because that means I won't be coming back inside." He goes, "No. You need to come back in here only if you're going to tell me where your brothers body is." And I was like, "Too-da-loo buddy 00:44:37]. Too-da-loo."

Joshua Wright: And I walked out. He goes, "Here, I'll get the door for you." And I said, "I'll pray for you. I'm going to have to pray for you because you've lost your mind." He goes, "What's bothering you?" He said, "Are you mad? Did you not think it was going to be like this?" I said, "No, I didn't." I said, "I thought that they were going to be helpful. I came to you guys. Wow. It's not even timeline possible for anything to have happened like that." As soon as I notified them about my brother missing, they found my truck. None of this stuff makes sense with his little theory.

Joshua Wright: And then also, I brung my notebook there that day. I had that 3,000 page notebook. I said "Dude, I got absolutely everything that I'm talking about. I can show you what you're talking about with me. You can't show me anything." Like how do you have some sort of evidence that my brother was anywhere past that date once I'd been released? How do you have anything to show? Because if nothing else, that would have made his little bitty case for him right there in that room if he would have showed me like, "Boom. Look Josh, this is you. And this is past that date you were talking about. You're a liar." You know? Like something like that?


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: But he had nothing like that. So to me, in my opinion, if he's got some knowledge of that in such a serious way, like enough to do an accusation? You should have something to show like that. Even with Steve, this guy Steve right? I've not went up to his face and told him he'd done anything. And there's reasons behind that, is I won't do it unless I got more than enough ... I'm not going to screw this up. I'm not going to be a liar or anything. That's a pretty serious thing to do as an accusation. And then also, lets think about this to anybody that hears it. He accused me of that and then he let me go. What do they think if I'm actually guilty or if this guy thinks I'm actually guilty? Him letting me go would cause me to do what? If I'm guilty, I'm like holy crap, I just got away with this. I'm running, right? Wouldn't that be what I would do? Holy hell, I got to get away from here, I'm running away now at this point.


Joshua Wright: Them letting me go shows how absolutely no proof that there is. And in my opinion, I don't feel like I failed this little test. Or maybe I did, who knows? The guy on the machine, as I was taking it, I noticed ... I figured he was highlighting something or something with his mouse but on a certain question, he would click and drag and click and drag and click and drag his mouse. That's all I know.


Marissa Jones: Well, I just wanted to say that it's constitutionally acceptable for them to lie to you. I mean, they could even say something like, "We have someone who puts you there on that day. We have your finger prints."


Joshua Wright: I never thought about that. And when I got back to the car from that being over with, I looked down at the phone and I seen that and I was like, "I fucking forgot about that." Like when I seen you had sent that to me, I was like, "Aw, shit!"


Marissa Jones: I know that you know a good bit about the law. But I also understand that in a moment like that when you're under extreme stress, it's really, really easy to forget that.


Joshua Wright: Well see I don't typically forget that type of thing. But that is actually something that I didn't know. I didn't know that they could actually literally come and do that type of thing, officially or formally.


Marissa Jones: Mm-hmm (affirmative).


Joshua Wright: I didn't know that they could literally come and try to antagonize a person on purpose but ...


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: Either way it goes, when I was walking out, I felt like there are really no lifeguards at this pool. There's no real heroes, apparently. And I didn't know what ... I remember something else I did say once I went back in after reaching out to you was that I'm done. I said, "I can't allow Kayleigh's dad to have a murder charge put on him or something because I'm looking for my brother." I said, "Then I'm going to have to stop." I said, "I don't know of where of any heroes are at this point. I can't do everything. I can do a lot of things but I can't do absolutely everything. And if I feel like looking for my little brother is going to put me in jail for murder, I'm going to have to at some point recognize how detrimental this might be and preserve the fact that I'm the only parent to my child."


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: And that saddens me more than anything else because there apparently isn't any heroes.


Marissa Jones: And also, you know how when you see somebody lawyer up, as people say, and people automatically assume that they're guilty because they got an attorney? Well, in a case like with you, what happened the other day.


Joshua Wright: But having an attorney to me feels like, for what? There's no court case coming up. For what?


Marissa Jones: No, no, no.


Joshua Wright: I mean I wouldn't know or assume to have one because I'm like, "We don't have any court things coming up."


Marissa Jones: Well I know Josh, but it would protect you. Like say you went back to the FBI, you'd just say let them talk to your attorney and your attorney will say, "My client will speak to you as long as I'm present. And that kind of thing." That's how you protect yourself.


Joshua Wright: Well that makes a lot of sense. But as I said like even now, if I went and got one or something, which financially I'm not able to. That's why I did my daughter's case perse. I got my daughter in my custody fully without an attorney. I typed up all the forms, everything. I learned how to do it from studying. And I did it all by myself. I did all the subpoenas, the affidavits, the judges order, the petitions and all these things. And the things you have to turn in with those packets. Like a financial statement when you turn it in. All those papers and stuff that go with it, I typed them all up. I had to do that type of thing because attorneys required down payments of ridiculous amounts of money.



Admin Note: Big deal, the majority of the population has done this also. It's not hard, the forms are online or you can get them from the clerk of court. Directions come with it, you fill it out and turn it in. Easy peasy. 



Marissa Jones: Retainers?


Joshua Wright: Yeah. When it seemed like to me my daughter was an inevitable, obvious, provable, Google search even, result. Like danger. She was in an actual current meth lab and stuff and they wanted that first. And it seemed so open and shut to me that it shocked me and aggravated me and motivated me to go do that. I wouldn't even be capable of having one on stand by or to be a representative of our family or anything.


Marissa Jones: Excuse me for a second. I just wanted to say to you that most attorneys will do free consultations. And that you should at least consult with one before going back to the FBI, shall they ever invite you back.


Joshua Wright: I don't ever have any intentions on ... I don't know how I'm going to approach these people at this point in regards to the search for my brother. I know I don't really feel like that I'm going to receive official capacity help or something, if that makes sense. I don't know what to expect. I'm not going to stop. And I did have some thoughts about that especially even yesterday. Is that my big push, my big drive was to do this for my mom. And I wondered if I needed to do it still. I don't know how to explain it. I don't feel the urgency, kind of, but then again my mom would not have wanted me to stop.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: It's very sad that she's now left. And I didn't get that for her. I feel like I've failed her a little there. But I know that-


Marissa Jones: You did everything you could do though, Josh. You can't say ... I know you feel that way but.


Joshua Wright: I know that I still need to find that answer out because my mom knew that I would and I still need to finish that fight.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: To figure out these answers. So I don't know if I'm going to be going to reach out for anybody's official capacity. Like I don't know if I have any reason to reach back out to the FBI myself. If they come to me then they'll get me in a defensive state because I now am weary of them.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: But I don't know of any other thing that I can do other than do it in my own way, the search. But, in my opinion, somebody needs to step this up. Like the sheriff's department, if nothing else, let's hope that they finally go, "You know what, he's reached out to the FBI, he's got all this going on, his mom just passed away, look at all this attention maybe that it's getting like with the people calling in and they're not going to stop maybe?" Or something like that. Lets just do what we can. And maybe they'll be able to topple it now finally.

Because I've got a very good theory but it can't be too far off base. And I don't see how they can't. I've done all the work anyhow. Somebody should just want to silence it. It'll make them look so good, the sheriff's department, would it not? If they go, "You know what ..." They had a little press conference one day talking about how they found him and they figured it out. Wouldn't they not look like oh, wow. They've done it!


Marissa Jones: Yeah. Well since I hadn't spoken to you on the phone since that happened on Tuesday, I wanted to tell you that story from my point of view. I was at work and I had my phone charging behind me, so that's how like I missed your first call, but I heard it and turned around. And then, I was like, "What's going on?" And then when I spoke to you, I got into such a panic that I like couldn't function at work anymore. And my boss had some people in to sign like their wills and estate planning documents, and he made a mistake on the first page of each one and had them listed as living in the wrong county. So, he was like, "Hey, can you fix this mistake for me and reprint the first page?"

So I'm like, "Okay, okay." But I'm like fidgeting and I don't want to leave my phone and then you call when I'm in the other room. So, I go and I print it. I was brain farting left and right. And I reprinted both of those first pages again with the wrong county on them. And then I felt like such an idiot when he brought it to my attention. And I'm like, "I just can't deal with this right now." You know? And then I left work and I was freaking out and it was actually I think like a full hour before I heard back from you that everything was okay. But I was definitely, definitely worried.


Joshua Wright: Yeah like I said, we've kind of become friends you know and stuff. But why I reached out to you was for the reason that I've had set up before, is I felt like I was going to jail for some reason. Like this is the craziest thing. And I wasn't prepared for that. Normally I'm prepared for the worst and I get surprised by success or progress. I try to deal with things like that. But I needed to ... Let's say I went to jail. I needed you to continue raising a little bit of the obvious hell.


Marissa Jones: Mm-hmm (affirmative).


Joshua Wright: While I was in there. Because there wouldn't be many people that would know how to do what we are doing, what you are doing and so forth. Like, if I was in there last night still or something from this week, number one I would have not been there for my mom. But number two, I mean think about that for a second. Number two, I'd be sitting in there and Sheriff's talk would have came on and you know, I still need people to ... Why in the world would y'all put Josh in this, you know what I'm saying? Like, to continue being the fuss that's been created plus up a little bit more. Turn the dial up just a little bit because I'd be in there.


Marissa Jones: Now, I asked you this the other day and then you said you were going to do it. Of course, this was before your mom passed away. And I said, "Can you please give your mom and your brother my contact information in case anything were to happen."


Joshua Wright: Yeah.


Marissa Jones: Because I only have your phone number.


Joshua Wright: Right.


Marissa Jones: And email and stuff. So, I just wanted to remind you that you can give my contact information to whoever you think is ...


Joshua Wright: That's this question now is the whoever.


Marissa Jones: Mm-hmm (affirmative).


Joshua Wright: So I don't know who that might be but I'll make sure that I have somebody.


Marissa Jones: Write down my phone number that Kayleigh could even call me in an emergency, somewhere. You know what I'm saying?


Joshua Wright: Yeah. Yeah. See, I've given you access to like ... I think I did. Did I not give you the word. Yeah, I gave you access to the where's Noah Davis account.


Marissa Jones: No you didn't-


Joshua Wright: On purpose. Yeah, I did. I gave you the password in case you could see. That way you could look and see if I showed up missing.


Marissa Jones: Oh I have that. Yeah, I have that. I have that. Yes, I do.


Joshua Wright: Yeah, that's a good thing to keep in mind because if I show up missing, you can look on there and see my travels in full. Like right now, you can see that I'm at home and things like that.


Marissa Jones: Oh, you know when I couldn't get ahold of you for a couple days, I was stalking that like crazy.


Joshua Wright: Right. Because there's a guilty person out here still right now in this world and they're mad about the fuss I'm making about it. I guarantee. And with the threats I've already gotten and let's say with Steve even being as upset as he is, you never know. But, what gives that credibility because in a normal situation, you'd be like, "You think they're that mad?" Yes I do!


Marissa Jones: Well...


Joshua Wright: Whoever this person actually is, they've actually done something to or with my brother. So yes, there's a dangerous person out here. There's an actual one.


Marissa Jones: Mm-hmm (affirmative).


Joshua Wright: And so this actual one may get me. Which is why I'm a little prepared for that but not fully.


Marissa Jones: I just wanted to tell you that you're the first person who's ever made me feel like a stalker.


Joshua Wright: Well, thanks I guess. I don't know. I need somebody to keep up on tabs with everything so, don't feel like that. Just feel like you're in a position of responsibility. As I'm in a position of danger, honestly, by going forward with this stuff when I'm looking into it. I'm finding answers and so that's going to upset somebody.


Marissa Jones: No, I have a question for you. Someone asked me this. Who paid for those billboards?


Joshua Wright: They were free.


Marissa Jones: Because ... Okay, can I just read you this email real quick?


Joshua Wright: Yeah.


Marissa Jones: Okay, got it. Okay.

Thank you for your concern and interest in this investigation. I assure you-


Joshua Wright: Detective Miles?


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: Yeah. And he's taking credit for the billboards, I bet.


Marissa Jones: I assure you every effort is being made to resolve this case and has been since the beginning. Public awareness not being known as you stated surprised me. Over the last two years Noah has been posted on our Facebook page multiple times, newspaper articles in Chattanooga and Catoosa County have been run. Two billboards were up for a month earlier this year on Battlefield Parkway and Cloud Springs Road. Local television coverage and a national missing persons program called NamUS, have all been utilized during the investigation. Along with a Facebook page maintained by his family. Again, thank you for your interest and concern.


Joshua Wright: Yeah. He's done that before, kind of in a way that makes it sound like when they say, fliers handed out and stuff like that, like yeah I did that. I did that. They didn't do that. I did that with the billboard. Hell, I designed the billboard. I worked hand in hand with the guy that owns the digital billboards, of course. And he also gave that to me for free. But they haven't done any of that. It's been me. There's been one news agency and I think I maybe had sent you that link before. I was on foot one day handing out fliers and I knocked on their door and they let me go down there and they filmed a little thing about me and then they put it on the air. It was very, very brief. And that was our channel 12 here but-


Marissa Jones: Is that WDEF?


Joshua Wright: Yeah.


Marissa Jones: Okay.


Joshua Wright: And they're awesome now. And I may reach out and see if they want to do an update now that they know the main push behind that story is that Josh is trying to find this out with my mother being ill before it gets worse. That kind of thing. I may see if they would ... He knows that my mom's passed. That news anchor does because he wrote me in already. He's a very nice guy.


Marissa Jones: Yeah. Well that's the only media outlet that I contacted who wrote me back.


Joshua Wright: His name is John Mercer.


Marissa Jones: Yeah, that's who wrote me.


Joshua Wright: Really? Because he's very polite, very nice and they do their job there. I wouldn't say they're the top news agency here but they're probably the number three or whatever you want to look at it. They have no ties with anybody else.

Let me tell you about this, there's channel three WRCB here and from day one, like almost the same day that I filed the missing person report and stuff, they came here and filmed a thing with my mom with me. And everything about Noah. Like did an in-depth little filming in the driveway, in our living room when he was talking to my mom or whatever. And it was suppose to come on that night and they, for no reason, they will not write me back or nothing. It never went on the air. They never aired it, they never showed it, they never explained why.

That's the second time they've done that. But they have an unaired story, I'm sure that taped footage of those interviews still exist. But they never done that. Which is pretty weird to me. That one really made me extremely upset. Especially with Media wise. But the way it works around here is that no media will really do anything unless the Sheriff's department reaches out to them. That's why the Chattanooga Times has not done anything. The newspaper that he's talking about, if you look at the name of the article, have you seen what I'm talking about? What maybe he's referencing?


Marissa Jones: Who? Who are we talking about? Oh, are we talking about what the person who emailed me is referencing?


Joshua Wright: It has to be.


Marissa Jones: Okay.


Joshua Wright: The channel, I mean not channel, but the newspaper that has is our local county newspaper. And the headline for it is, "Ringgold man continues searching for his missing brother." And it's an interview with me. Yeah. It doesn't have a reach like Chattanooga Times does but it went out. And it turned out to be an article mostly about me instead of my brother, which kind of bothered me a lot, actually.



Admin Note: the article they are referencing http://www.northwestgeorgianews.com/catoosa_walker_news/news/ringgold-man-continues-search-for-missing-brother/article_5920965e-121a-11e6-aa34-9b9a633666c4.html 



Marissa Jones: Well, I know it bothers you, but you have to understand that your part of the story is interesting to people as well.


Joshua Wright: Right.


Marissa Jones: And our part of the story, you've made it a story. It should-


Joshua Wright: And other than that though, there's not been any other outlets do anything. The NamUS website, we've discussed that. It even says plainly as day, missing since June or whatever, 2014. And entered in, in the system February 2016. Other than that though, you'll see all the time ... And as I said, I can't comment on anything Catoosa County ever shares, they've got me blocked from their page, which is a whole other weird thing.

And I've never lost my cool with these people, especially out loud publicly or anything, in a sense where they would feel like blocking me would be important. I've never done that ever. Really, typically you'll do that if somebody has cursed or said something smart [allicky 01:03:48] or whatever on a page or whatever, who knows. But I'm blocked from even having that thought because it's not possible for me to do that. Although I can log in under my other eight accounts and do it. Yeah. They've done that for no reason.

But the only thing they've ever done with Noah is share him as a wanted person. And you can go to Catoosa County's page and search. And you can search, type in the word Noah. Or the name Noah and it pulls up the only existing posts that they've made. And it's where they share him as a wanted person.



Admin Note: They listed him as a wanted person on July 17, 2015. https://www.facebook.com/CatoosaCountySheriffsOffice/posts/800834756680491



Marissa Jones: Yeah, yeah. So I wanted to explain, for the people who are listening, about my experience calling in last night.


Joshua Wright: Okay, I'm doing that right now. I'm making sure, I'm searching on their page right now, I'm typing in Noah.


Marissa Jones: I called in to Sheriff's talk last night and what's the guys name who wasn't there?


Joshua Wright: Sheriff Sisk. Our Catoosa County sheriff.


Marissa Jones: He wasn't there. And who's the other guy?


Joshua Wright: Sheriff Steve Wilson, the Walker County sheriff. He was there. I mean I did briefly see that he was doing the show solo.


Marissa Jones: Okay. So, I called in and I ... There were several listeners who were watching. I tried to record it and it didn't. And it only recorded the video, not the audio unfortunately. But I called in and I mentioned that your mother had passed away and that it was the two year anniversary, which she then corrected me and was like, "No, he actually disappeared in June." But anyway, and then I said, "I thought that it would be a good time to put some more effort into looking for him in honor of your mother and everything." And he was more receptive to me. Now, I'm going to assume that when you call in and the other gentleman is on the show that this guy lets him take the lead and that's why they-


Joshua Wright: Most of the time, yeah.


Marissa Jones: Yeah. And that's why ...


Joshua Wright: Except for once and they're all videos all on Noah's search page by the way. If you go to the videos, you'll see every single call in from me and my mom.


Marissa Jones: He appeared to be more receptive to me than when you've called and your mother has called. And he did say, you know, acknowledge that your brother was missing and he did say something along the lines of if anybody knows anything, anybody sees or anybody knows anything, anybody saw anything, anybody hears anything please contact the Catoosa County sheriff's department. So, I did appreciate that. And then later on ...


Joshua Wright: Like I said, he's a good guy.


Marissa Jones: Yeah. Later on in the show ... what was weird was like right after he hung up with me, he immediately went and played some pre-recorded thing. And I was like, oh you know there's goes. Nobody else is going to be able to call in so I went downstairs. And then another listener was able to get in at the end of the show but I missed it because I assumed that they were going to play that pre-recorded thing until the end. So, we're planning on doing it again next week. As long as it's not a re-run, like you said. We're going to do it again next week. There's several people who are pretty dedicated to this.


Joshua Wright: Yeah, they've wrote out to me too. Which I'm so thankful. I'm almost in shock about that. For that and the donations because they are so needed, it's not even funny. But the call ins, like I've had them personally write me, "I've seen your page." And all that or whatever. Reach out to my personal Facebook pages, messenger and stuff. It's pretty awesome. It's pretty crazy to see that all these people from everywhere else in the world, kind of almost, doing what I would assume that people here locally would do. And I've been trying to reach out and get people to call in to that thing forever. But, I can't get anybody to stay in their face about it.


Marissa Jones: Well we're not going away.


Joshua Wright: That's pretty awesome to see. I hope that you know, as I even warned you is that yesterday may have been a re-run but I want sheriff Sisk to see that.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: I wish he would've been there to answer because he would've been ... I want to see how he responds to that because to be honest with you, lets say that for some reason, he's there next week and the whole show ends up being okay next caller. And it's about Noah. And then okay, next caller. And it's about whatever. How he handles it after that is what's going to be what I want to see. I want to see that if he gets that and he see's that, if he's going to call me. Or come by finally. Or something like that because that alone has been what I've been asking for, for nine weeks now. And they won't even write me back. Like that alone.

But absolutely, they need to do something about their efforts because somebody find out one single thing that they have done, they're taking credit for what I've done. Talking about fliers have been handed out and billboards have been made and Facebook ... They've only made one Facebook post. And that's all that they've done. That's all that they've done. I've done the fliers, I made the fliers, I've handed the fliers out. They've not given any fliers out, period. They've not done any billboards, I did the billboards without their help or permission. It's been me, period. The news article, I guess you could call it, that it was in the paper, was about me and of course I initiated that. I went down there in person and got that made myself, period. I did everything. I'm the one that got WDEF or whatever.

But the rest of them have told me specifically that they go by the sheriff's department doing it and all the time, all the time they have. Catoosa County sheriff's department has a missing person we'd like to ... You know all the time it gets coverage and Noah's not had that coverage from day one. Two years have passed and people out here just assume that, "Damn, he's either alive. Or they figured it out by now because nobody's every said hey we need your help."


Marissa Jones: Does it piss you off that they'll write me back but they won't write you back?



Admin Note: Catoosa County Sheriff's Dept DOES write Joshua back. We have the emails but out of respect for the investigation, we will not release them. The only ones we've released are the ones Joshua himself has publicly posted.



Joshua Wright: Yeah. Because I've never done anything.


Marissa Jones: Right. And the fact that you're his brother.


Joshua Wright: Yeah!


Marissa Jones: And I'm not.


Joshua Wright: And I have not done anything. You know that gives other than the fact that I won't accept the line of crap they're feeding you. What are they going to do? Write me back and say, "Josh we've handed out fliers." No, you haven't. "We've put up billboards." No you haven't! That's why they can't write me back because they can't say that. If they tried to give me that response, I'd be like, "No you haven't. No you haven't. No you haven't."


Marissa Jones: Does it make you mad that they attempted to claim that as their own efforts?


Joshua Wright: Hell yeah it does.


Marissa Jones: When I sent you that email were you like fired up?


Joshua Wright: No. Because I knew that's exactly how they would. It fired up maybe because I feel like I got to correct it really quick. That's the only thing that fires me up. Really? Put my stamp on it to prove them wrong really fast. Other than that, doesn't surprise me at all. Nothing they do surprises me. Other than not show up and help me and my mom on time yesterday. You would've thought they would have wanted to make sure that my mom stayed alive and stuff a little bit quicker than what they would have. And worry about me being angry.

I mean, using my first name over the air and everything like that like I got infamous like that. Where everybody knows who Josh is in Catoosa County, police wise. You never hear them call somebody by their first name, not even themselves. You know what I'm saying, I'm the only person in the world they use only "Josh is getting angry."


Marissa Jones: Apparently you have a reputation for that.


Joshua Wright: Well, they know who I am because I put them on notice and I keep like when they've pulled me over, I've recorded the whole audio or something one time. I got recognized the last time I was ever pulled over, recognized by the cop as the guy from YouTube. And he let me go too because of it. He goes you gone put me on youtube are you? Like that kind of thing. They're all scared of accountability around here like crazy. Like you would not believe. And that's why they only worry about being recorded when I go into the stupid place. And it's ridiculous. Why would you have anything to hide? If I'm the detective and the guys coming in here and he's been recording it, I'd be like, "Hey man. Alright. How you doing?" I don't even have to ask because I wouldn't care. Unless we're discussing something like involves a juvenile or something that isn't suppose to be put out like that. You know what I'm saying? There are issues and there are times like if someone was raped and maybe we didn't want to say that person ... you know that kind of thing.



Admin Note: Joshua Wright has recorded the authorities without their knowledge, even after being asked if he has a recording device and he denies that he does. And Joshua can't figure out why the authorities won't tell him anything? This is why. https://youtu.be/l9LEps9PAzI  https://youtu.be/UBOIMxzNp2Y  https://youtu.be/xavE75BGRBA https://youtu.be/xYCmJ0BeG2Y  https://youtu.be/viq-2wAoOi0  https://youtu.be/xj1EDPuV-s0  



Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: This isn't sensitive information.


Marissa Jones: Can I ask you a question? Somebody asked about this. Because they couldn't find more information. The girl that died in the fire, did they ever that you know of to your knowledge, if you don't know maybe you could look into it when you have a chance, do you ever know what the ...



Admin Note: They are talking about Courtney Danielle Godwin, of Chattanooga, TN. She was Noah Davis's friend and she died in a house fire on November 24, 2014. It's been said she was one of the last people to see Noah before he disappeared. http://www.chattanoogan.com/2014/11/24/289208/Courtney-Godwin-25-Was-Victim-In.aspx https://imgur.com/a/BB1Zk



Joshua Wright: Oh, the cause of the fire, no. And I've seen them mention that. I read all this stuff. Yeah, I want to find that out and that's a good question because I never really thought about finding that out. I guarantee you it wasn't nothing that kept it as a suspicious-


Marissa Jones: I saw that they ruled out that it was like a meth lab explosion but that was essentially [crosstalk 01:13:15].


Joshua Wright: Yeah. I don't believe that it was a meth lab explosion either. I'd also seen that that video that that listener found, I'd never seen that video. And that was very interesting because it had cell phone video of the fire.

Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: And I was like, "Wow, I never seen this." That's pretty hard to do is trump me on Google searching and stuff. But they had found that and I had found that video to be quite interesting. If you didn't notice I think that was channel 12 wasn't it, WDEF? That really good news agency but watching that even caused me to hear that of course too. That was a first time that I'd heard someone suspected it to be a meth lab explosion. And I guess that the people were talking about that like that is because that girl had ... That's not where she lived, number one. I don't know who's house that was.


Marissa Jones: Maybe you just start investigating that.


Joshua Wright: I went and I pulled the other day to open records request on Noah's friend.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: That passed away, that suicide.



Admin Note: They are talking about Douglas Andrew Lemons AKA Drew, who commited suicide on June 8, 2014, BEFORE Noah was released from prison. His passing has nothing to do with Noah's disappearance yet Joshua continues to bring it up, which is very painful to Drew's family and friends. http://www.chattanoogan.com/2014/6/9/278107/Lemons-Douglas-Andrew.aspx 



Marissa Jones: Mm-hmm (affirmative).


Joshua Wright: Whatever. I pulled that. And then I pulled the one on, I haven't said her name and I haven't said a code name for her yet, but the female that had-



Admin Note: He is talking about Olivia Sucher who died April 2, 2016 of a drug overdose. A few people were charged in her death. http://www.eastridgenewsonline.com/two-charged-crimes-aftermath-od-death/ One of those people was found dead on August 16, 2017. http://newschannel9.com/news/local/womans-body-found-old-cleveland-pike-in-ooltewah 



Marissa Jones: The drug overdose?


Joshua Wright: Overdose.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: I pulled that one as well. So read those.


Marissa Jones: Not right now. But like when you get a chance and you feel up to it, go do that with this one too.


Joshua Wright: Yeah because I'll see. But as we can obviously see, it must not have stayed suspicious or they would have labeled it and kept it as a suspicious ... It couldn't have ... Once again, they probably closed the door on it and then not ... Again, that's a different County and I don really think that they're that corrupted or anything up there. It's Hamilton County but I feel like, as you know, the fire was ... What are the chances? There's not really so many ... There's no such thing as coincidences, really. Especially when it surrounds deaths like this and with what we've even discussed off the air and on the air, whatever. With the common denominator being around what it's around. What are the chances in so many coincidences involving so many different deaths being that way? It seems too you know ... And I personally believe, like as you see she reached out to Noah, even just before she had passed away and stuff. She was picked up from my uncles house the day before Noah had went missing, by Steve and stuff.


Marissa Jones: Was she with your brother when she was picked up? Or ...


Joshua Wright: Yeah. Yeah. They picked her up from my uncles house or whatever. It was the story. Other than that ... So there's only a few people in this world that would have a way of, nuh-uh, saying anything. And they have been eliminated. That's the odd thing to me. It's odd more than just a coincidental way. Odd as in like, what the hell, somebody has shut up every single way that someone could have waved a flag.


Marissa Jones: What about this Brandon person that you said was your friend? And that was there at that hotel?


Joshua Wright: Oh yeah, what about him?


Marissa Jones: Well, I just was wondering like what's his deal? Does he seem to know anything?


Joshua Wright: No, he's called me. Him and Noah had just become kind of good friends. Brandon guy is my age. We went to school together almost every year, we had classes together, that kind of thing. But they just turned into work out buddies, while they'd gotten to know each other in jail. But he's never been in anything. No. He called me a few times like, "What happened to my work out buddy?" Kind of thing. "Where'd he go?" And then he'd mentioned that he noticed that people would bug him all the time like in the crowd that he didn't want to hang out with. And that was about it. He just assumed that he had kind of started hanging out with those friends a little bit again.


Marissa Jones: Was he at that hotel with Noah?


Joshua Wright: No. No. Brandon would never. He's a different ... He hangs out with ... He's got money and stuff like that. Not saying that that's cool or anything. But he was a different type of person than what Noah associated with.


Marissa Jones: Okay. I just wanted to clarify that.


Joshua Wright: But that car was his car. That car in those pictures is his car for example.


Marissa Jones: Oh.


Joshua Wright: He has a bit of his own money and stuff.


Marissa Jones: Was that a Porsche or something?


Joshua Wright: I don't know what it was but it's nice.


Marissa Jones: I'm trying to think if there were any other questions that people were asking that I wanted you to clarify.

Is there anything else that I'm missing that we needed to talk about?


Joshua Wright: No. Just that I want to say too that my mom was thrilled that she got to be a part of it. She said that even. She got to be a part of the show or whatever, the little bit that she did for you. And she was very excited about that. She goes, "I can't believe I got to be a part of it. Thank you." Because she always wanted to be a little bit more hands on with what I was doing with it.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: Like that video that I created that one day that we did via Facebook live. She felt really good about being a part of doing something.


Admin Note: May 25, 2016, Joshua Wright has his mother, Janice Davis, do a homemade interview titled "Interview with Janice Davis (Via Facebook Live)" https://youtu.be/gLzIkt304jE


Marissa Jones: Yeah, well ...


Joshua Wright: So she felt really good about being a part of this show. She doesn't really understand what podcasts are. Or she didn't really understand what podcasts were, I should say.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: But, things like that. She felt like she was very surprised to hear that I'd done one of these and that it'd picked up like it had and stuff like that. She was very thrilled that she got to be a part of it.


Marissa Jones: Well, I'll tell you, I think Noah's episodes are on a fast track to being some of the most popular ones because they already have more downloads than my three previous episodes. And that just doesn't usually happen. I don't know if people are sharing it or if it's just like ...


Joshua Wright: I appreciate that more than you can ... More than I can explain. I got a little worried like that you'd catch backlash or something because you focused. It seems like I don't ... Just from scrolling down the [Vanish 01:19:19] website or whatever like this will be a third thing. Like, I don't want people to get upset because you've done three things involving my case or whatever or anything like that. I don't want them to get upset or get tired of hearing about it or anything but...


Marissa Jones: Well, I was going to release it kind of like a bonus and not do my usual narration. I was just going to be like this is an update kind of thing and not every case I can do that with. I think people appreciate it. But I'm still going to release an episode on my normal schedule. This is just a bonus. So...


Joshua Wright: Well good because I don't want you to catch any backlash from your viewers on that. They could be looking forward to the next story. And then there's other people that need the attention and you know, this is an important thing you're doing. And that's what I'm so glad that I met an actual hero. And I haven't met many of those and you're doing something that's very important. You're in a position of responsibility and now it's become it's own thing. Like you have become an outlet and so that outlet needs to do it's job and you're doing a great job. Just make sure that there's other voices I know that are out there that have to get ... You're a difference maker. So make sure you stay on track doing that. Maybe if you got a do another update about my case or something in the future that we just throw it out there or in your schedule, but keep being that voice that you're being because you're a wonderful voice for the voiceless.


Marissa Jones: Thank you.


Joshua Wright: The timing I guess is another reason, you know? You've caught me at this moment and it was obviously a very important time frame of at least our friendship or knowing of one another like, I mean with my mom, it's not coincidental but I mean, you just happen to come in at a critical time that's needed updates, I guess. Now, especially with my beautiful mom passing, it's at a critical moment right now where almost anything and everything that happens with it is news update worthy-ish.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: Like, if someone does something tonight and it's on the news, it's like how would you not want to obviously ... You know what I'm saying? With her passing right now, it's a very critical stage. And if you don't put out anything in the future update wise even, what it's going to cause is everybody's different now. With the backlash showing against the people operating in the darkness. It's biblical terminology what I'm using there. People operating in the darkness like the sheriff's department is. With them hitting up sheriff's talk, that's causing things. These are going to cause reactions. And I'm sure these people that were the catalyst for change, they're going to want to know what they've done.


Marissa Jones: Mm-hmm (affirmative).


Joshua Wright: I mean I plan on at least letting you guys know and I'll stay in touch as much as I can. Of course the next two days is going to be difficult for me to stay as ...


Marissa Jones: People understand that, Josh.


Joshua Wright: Yeah.


Marissa Jones: So, it worked out well and then just the timing of it all. Like I was able to capture your mother just days before she passed away.


Joshua Wright: It was two days. Yeah, it was two days. That's a coincidence and that's the type of stuff that I'm glad that you are and have been here. And allowed for that even, you know? And I didn't think twice when putting this headset on my mothers head or anything. Because I knew you would take care of her on the call or whatever. You wouldn't like emotionally turn her into a wreck or nothing like some people can or do.

Shes got all these things posted in the house. Where is Noah Davis? And every flyer I made framed in this place and on our refrigerator and like I got to go pick up this stuff here in a minute and clean up and straighten all of her stuff up. There's a hand written note right now in the living room and stuff. Like it's just going to be hard to do. The hand written note was a to-do list and she didn't get half of it done so I don't know. There's a lot of things that are going to be very hard for me but this show's not.

And the people have been very supportive and they're the blessings that have gotten me up. Actually today was a day I knew I was going to get up and do some things. And it started off with me reading through and seeing how cool it was that people were doing me without me doing me. If that makes sense. And it felt good and I got up for that kind of reason. If you notice, that's what I started doing. I think I started replying back. Before I even said anything to you, it was like I had begin commenting in the group thing or whatever. Because I was reading it and I was like, "Man that's so cool." And that's what kind of woke me up.


Marissa Jones: Well, did you see the one person ... I thought this was so clever. Or sent a thank you card to Catoosa County and said, "Thank you ahead of time. Because I know 2016 is the year that you're going to find Noah."


Joshua Wright: No.


Marissa Jones: I thought that was great.


Joshua Wright: That's kind of what I'm talking about.


Marissa Jones: You didn't see that?


Joshua Wright: It's the things like that that'll ... I'll be honest with you, if I wasn't paying attention or giving a damn about a case, it's the things like that that would be like, "Man, something's going on. Something's going on." And as quiet as they've tried to make it, they see that the fire is burning now. And they can't put it out. And it's not put out. And then that they're not hiding it.

So, my papaw, who I'm named after, he was a pastor right. And my mom was very close with him. And she's now up there with him and stuff but I'll end with this on this note because it's kind of what my mom has done as well. But the very last thing he every said on this earth, I remember being in the room as he'd passed, like I said a life long pastor, was I've fought a good fight, I've finished my course, I've kept the faith. And second Timothy four verse seven, is that? Those were his actual last words. And I feel like that applies to my mom now. And he would have finished but the very next part is hence forth, there's laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord the righteous judge shall give me at that day and not to me only but to unto all them. Also that love is appearing.

And that's where she is and that's what she's got now. So, she's finished her course, she's fought her fight and she's kept her faith. And we're still here to be the catalysts and what is that change. And we are that what she believed in. She had faith in me that we would get this finished and so she's done all that she can. So lets do all that we can and I'd appreciate that. And that's all I could ask.


Marissa Jones: We are going to do all that we can. The only thing that I ask of you is that you don't put yourself in danger. We were talking about now that your moms gone, like Kayleigh-


Joshua Wright: And I don't know how I'm going to ... Like I work at night. My mom was always the available baby sitter. My job at night I don't know how I'm going to continue. I don't know how ... There's a lot of things I don't know how I'm going to do right now. I'm aware of the danger and the life change that has now happened. How that actually makes me a little bit more vulnerable too but my eyes are still keen to details, I'll tell you.


Marissa Jones: Do you ever think about moving away?


Joshua Wright: No.


Marissa Jones: No?


Joshua Wright: No.


Marissa Jones: You don't run from your problems?


Joshua Wright: No, I don't. No, I can't. And I like this area but I mean, the problems that I have are the problems that need fixing too.


Marissa Jones: Yeah.


Joshua Wright: I don't know. I mean, who's to say if I may some time in the future but my daughter, her friends and her school. And there's a lot that would entail and right now, I don't know. Who's to say after some closure in the future, if that's not going to be something that we do, but right now, no. I'm to going to ... The support that I've gotten from these folks, the folks with you have been the only good feelings I've been getting. So anything and every ... It really is, literally, it really is.


Marissa Jones: I am moved personally by the response from my listeners, so thank you listeners.


Joshua Wright: Yeah.


Marissa Jones: You know?


Joshua Wright: More than I can put into words.


Marissa Jones: They're good people. They want to make a difference. I don't know if you saw my rant earlier on Facebook but damn it, I'm getting pissed. I heard from a woman today about her missing sister and obviously the circumstances are different but similar in certain ways that she had a drug history. But she's getting the same problem where like the police won't call her or write her back. And the more that I hear this from people, the more aggravated I get.


Joshua Wright: Well, I get excited too because once I get everything settled after this [does 01:28:16], I can't wait to be one of these people like what you're people are doing right now. I'm going to be one of them people like, I hear a future story like that I'm like, "Where are they at? Let's call them!" And I'll use my resources and I'll be all about doing that same thing. I'll definitely be here and ready to help in any way I can in the future. I don't have any plans on turning into a wuss and bowing down to corruption or the enemy or anything in the future. My mom raised me right.


Marissa Jones: She did. You're a good guy.


Joshua Wright: Thank you. I appreciate that.



Admin Note: Recording of dispatch https://youtu.be/HA6BEVI-VRw



Speaker 1: Forward their information, Angel 28.

Speaker 4: 28. [inaudible 01:29:06]

Speaker 1: I just responded to Parsley. The complaint involved is the son is now attempting CPR.

Speaker 4: Thanks.

Speaker 1: 540.

Speaker 4: 540.

Speaker 1: CPR is currently in progress.

Speaker 4: [inaudible 01:29:34]

Speaker 5: F-128. Also CPR is in progress.

Come in.

Speaker 4: Can we get the corner in route?

Speaker 6: 15 [inaudible 01:29:47] and 26th.

Speaker 7: B10-7 is 10-23 is requesting the 10-79.

Speaker 1: 30 [constitute 01:29:55] 15-23. 40, where you at? Josh is rather angry.

Speaker 4: I'm [inaudible 01:30:03] now. Coming up past Pine Grove.

Speaker 7: Catoosa, this is 909.

Speaker 1: Alright I'm 10-4, I got him calm.

Speaker 4: Time player. Is there any way you can receive a 10-21?

Speaker 5: 35 Catoosa time and case number please?

Speaker 8: 535 your case number's 530. 5-3-0, the time of call was 7:38. 0-7-3-8.

Speaker 9: I'll reach that at three. These was CCAC. They're going to want to meet here for transport.



--------------------------------------------

Part 1 The Vanished Podcast

Part 2 The Vanished Podcast

Part 3 The Vanished Podcast


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