Matt Zavadsky, Robert Lawrence, and Rodney Dyche did a special end-of-year review of what they found in the EMS Media Log for “Inside EMS” and “EMS One Stop.” The EMS Media Log is maintained collaboratively by the American Ambulance Association (AAA) and the Academy of International Mobile Healthcare Integration (AIMHI). This log aggregates EMS-related news stories from local, regional, and national outlets across the U.S.
Rodney Dyche noted that the EMS Media Log documented 26 ambulance thefts in 18 states in 2024. Six of those thefts resulted in significant crashes. Matt Zavadsky observed that: “For patient safety, community safety, this is something that is a zero-failure option, and if you fail to secure your vehicle, you can go work somewhere else. Period.” Rob Lawrence said: “We need to work hard to ensure that we don’t have that statistic in 2025, an ambulance stolen every 2 weeks.”
I reviewed the stolen ambulance articles posted on Company Commander.com and the Company Commander Facebook page since 2018.
Crimes of opportunity
The most frequent theft comes from an unattended ambulance parked at the emergency department or medical clinic. Some were idling, and all were unlocked. Nashville Fire had two idling ambulances stolen on the same day in October 2023.
Less frequent is the ambulance stolen from an incident scene, either by the patient or a third party. Sometimes, the caregivers and patient are still in the ambulance. That happened in Charlotte, NC, in April 2019, Phoenix in November 2023, New Orleans in October 2023, and in Atlanta in April 2024.
In a rare event, an ambulance is stolen from a station. In April 2022, Chicago Ambulance 66 was stolen from the Chinatown fire station and chased nearly 80 miles. In October 2022 Chicago Ambulance 71 was stolen from the fire station. In June 13, 2021, an ambulance was stolen from the Kunkel Ambulance garage in Utica, New York, and driven into Irondequoit Bay
Our featured image is the aftermath of a person entering the Detroit Fire Department’s Medic 8-HazMat 1-Chief 1/Fleet Maintenance facility in November 2019. The interloper drove Medic 8 through a bay door and later crashed exiting Interstate 75, during a police pursuit.
Here is a two-step approach to thwarting crimes of opportunity:
- Establish and enforce a policy of taking the keys and locking up the ambulance when it is unattended. The Commission on Accreditation of Ambulance Services (CAAS) mandates a standard for accredited agencies to have a written policy/procedure to prevent vehicle theft. These agencies must provide copies of the policy/procedure detailing how vehicles are secured when unattended.
- Install an anti-theft device that auto-locks the transmission when the vehicle is placed in park. Tremco (https://tremcoemergencyproducts.com/ ) and Intermotive (https://intermotive.net/autogard/) offer CAAS-compliant anti-theft devices.
Violence Against Caregivers
EMS caregivers are attacked, and the assailant steals the ambulance. The most tragic example is the murder of FDNY EMT Yadira Arryo on March 16, 2017, when Jose Gonzalez drove over Arryo with the ambulance.
It happened in Prince George’s County, Maryland in January 2014 (killing a bystander when the ambulance crashed in a restaurant parking lot), Kanawha County, West Virginia, in November 2017, Detroit in April 2019, Washington County, Georgia, in January 2022; Houston, Texas in July 2021, Bronx, New York in August 2021, Montgomery County, Maryland in February 2022, Greer, South Carolina, in May 2022, Macon, Georgia in January, 2024, and Schenectady, New York in September 2024.
Since the pandemic, the number of reported attacks on EMS caregivers has increased. This will require a more comprehensive and expensive effort to prevent, react, and obtain justice when our caregivers are attacked and vehicles stolen.
Preventing the attack involves caregiver training and practice in:
- Situation Awareness
- De-escalation
- Operational and tactical protocols when encountering high-hazard situations
React to an attack using:
- Self-defense training
- Wearing appropriate personal protective gear
- Effective emergency communication (panic button)
- Use an automatic vehicle locator or global positioning service to track ambulances
- Robust public safety response when an attack is announced
Provide consequences for attacks to obtain justice
- Complete reporting of incidents
- Caregiver body cameras
- Effective legal prosecution of assailants
- Employee assistance services for attacked caregivers
Since 2016 the Seattle Fire Department has experienced increased attacks on caregivers when responding to medical calls, especially in the homeless encampments. Because of the high frequency of these calls, police are not always available. In June 2018 the department added a fire company to respond with an aid car (EMT ambulance) to every EMS call in Pioneer Square (1,200 EMS runs a year) and homeless encampments. The frequency of attacks against fire department members continued to increase. Between January and April 2023, there were more than 50 attacks.
There was a need to close a legal loophole to protect Seattle firefighters from interference the same way police officers are covered when performing their work activities. Under the legislation passed in May 2023, people can be arrested and charged if they intentionally physically interfere with firefighters, EMTs, and other fire responders who are actively responding to an emergency. It would also prevent people from intentionally refusing to leave the scene of an investigation of a crime while an investigation is in progress after being requested to do so.
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