Single vehicle crash on I-89 near Exit 17, Lebanon NH
Please note:
This is not an official report. The headline and summary are generated by automated AI systems from public-safety dispatch audio. Always verify with official sources.
As discussed during the dispatch call, emergency services responded to a single-vehicle crash involving a Jeep Grand Cherokee on Interstate 89 northbound near Exit 17 in Lebanon, New Hampshire. The vehicle struck a guardrail and an exit sign. One person reported back pain, and it was unknown whether there were any visible injuries.
Audio|Heard on: Lebanon Fire Dispatch
Listen to dispatch call
01:51
Transcript:
00:00
Lebanon Fire, motor vehicle accident, Citywide Hydrant District, near Interstate 89, Exit 18 northbound in Lebanon.
00:09
Motor vehicle accident, Cityside Hydrant District, near Interstate 89, Exit 18 northbound in Lebanon.
00:18
Time out 0718.
00:22
Fire alarm, Ambulance 1.
00:26
We both want.
00:27
Responding from Exit 18.
00:28
Exit 17.
00:34
Ambulance 1, you're responding from Exit 17 at 0719.
00:39
Fire alarm to the responding units.
00:41
It's going to be a single car motor vehicle accident.
00:43
Struck a guardrail, struck the exit sign.
00:46
Main complaint is back pain.
00:48
Unknown if the person is bleeding.
00:52
Fire alarm.
00:54
Ambulance 1.
00:56
Ambulance 2.
00:59
Do you know if it's Exit 17 or 18? 17 is on the off ramp northbound.
01:06
There is a car on the side of the road with four-way flashers on.
01:17
It's saying 17.
01:18
It says there is a Jeep Grand Cherokee.
01:24
Message received.
01:26
It appears it is the Jeep Cherokee on Exit 17 off ramp northbound.
01:37
Exit 17 northbound.
01:46
Engine 111.
01:49
Responding, copy the update.
Disclaimer:
This transcript is automatically generated by AI from live dispatch audio. Dispatch communications may include background noise, overlapping speakers, or rapidly evolving situations, and automated transcription may not capture all details or context.
Note:
Auto-generated from live dispatch audio, which may contain errors. Dispatch calls are not confirmed incidents. Always verify with official sources.
