An Anchorage woman froze to death. A lawsuit claims a 911 dispatcher failed to get her urgent help.

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – On Feb. 5, 2026, the family of Alecia Ai Lindsay filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the Municipality of Anchorage, alleging that a 911 dispatcher’s failure to recognize a medical emergency — and a delay of more than an hour in sending help — directly caused her death.

The case turns on a narrow but consequential legal question: Does Alaska law shield emergency dispatchers from negligence liability, even when their decisions may have cost a life?

Feb. 8, 2024

It was seasonably cold in Anchorage on Feb. 8, 2024 — temperatures that day ranged from 17–28 degrees Fahrenheit, with 35 inches of snow on the ground.

By 6:34 a.m., Alecia Lindsay was already outside in it. Anchorage police call logs show Lindsay was knocking on the door at a home on East 10th Avenue, sitting on the ground by a garage. She wasn’t speaking. She looked disoriented. A resident at the home called 911…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS