WCPO: Roller coaster riders are accidentally calling 911

UC professor suggests turning off phones to avoid unintended calls

Guests at amusement parks including Kings Island in Mason, Ohio, are accidentally calling 911 due to Apple's new crash detection feature, WCPO reported.

Between Sept. 18 and Oct. 9, the Warren County Communications Center in Ohio received 12 calls generated by iPhones while their users were riding a Kings Island roller coaster. The crash detection feature, which is intended to detect car crashes, is included on the new iPhone 14 and Apple Watches.

“It's doing its job to announce that it found the thing it was set to find,” said Jess Kropczynski, an associate professor at the University of Cincinnati's School of Information Technology. “It’s just that this can often be a false positive.”

Kropczynski suggested people should turn off their phones prior to riding a roller coaster to prevent accidentally triggering the crash detection software.

See more from WCPO.

Featured image at top courtesy of Unsplash.

Impact Lives Here

The University of Cincinnati is leading public urban universities into a new era of innovation and impact. Our faculty, staff and students are saving lives, changing outcomes and bending the future in our city's direction. Next Lives Here.

Related Stories

1

Ohio nurses weigh in on proposed federal loan rule

December 12, 2025

Spectrum News journalist Javari Burnett spoke with UC Dean Alicia Ribar and UC nursing students Megan Romero and Nevaeh Haskins about proposed new federal student loan rules. Romero and Haskins, both seniors, were filmed in the College of Nursing’s Simulation Lab.

3

UC awarded nearly $1 million to help fight infant obesity spike

December 12, 2025

University of Cincinnati researcher Cathy Stough spoke with Spectrum News1 about a nearly $1 million National Institutes of Health grant awarded to UC to help prevent infant obesity through early nutrition support and family-based interventions.