Octo-Mom Says Pregnancy, Anxiety Contributed to Frantic 911 Calls
Nadya Suleman said repeated 911 calls don't signal a problem at home.
March 5, 2009 — -- Octuplet mom Police in Whittier, Calif., say they responded eight times to emergency calls from the Suleman family. Those 911 tapes are now raising questions about what the home environment is like as the mother of 14 says in an interview with Radar Online that she expects to start bringing some of her octuplets home from the hospital this week. The hospital, however, has indicated that it may not allow the children to go home with Suleman if it believes she is incapable of caring for that many infants. "I'm one of those parents, I have to see them at all times and know exactly what they're doing at all times, and if I don't, I get a little anxious, I get really nervous," Suleman told Radar Online this week. But on the 911 tapes, the voice on the other end of the phone sounds more than a little anxious. "Please God help me," she said in an October call when, pregnant with the octuplets. She couldn't find her 5-year-old son. "Oh God, I am going to kill myself. Oh God. I'm going to kill myself. I am going to kill myself." The 911 operator told Suleman to control herself in front of her other child, saying, "he doesn't need to hear that." "Help me!" Suleman said on the call. "My son is missing! I'm going crazy!" Her son was safe, having followed his grandmother as she walked around the block. Suleman said most of the 911 calls were made because of complications with her pregnancy. But the children also called 911 on their own. In one call, a little boy can be heard telling the 911 operator that he was in charge. And then there was the neighbor who called the California Department of Child and Family Services last summer, saying the children were not clean or well-fed. Suleman pointed out that investigators found no grounds for the complaint. "There was an elderly neighbor, and she thought the kids were making too much noise," Suleman said in one of her RadarOnline interviews. "The police showed up and found no merit to the complaint." Suleman, who spent the first weeks after her octuplets' birth hiding from the media, has become a fixture on Radar Online, giving interviews and keeping a daily diary. One recent entry wanted to know "Since when is it a crime to call 911?"