Exclusive Listen to Jonathan Majors39 domestic violence 911 call

Exclusive: Listen to Jonathan Majors' domestic violence 911 call – Business Insider

Down Angle Symbol A symbol in the form of an angle pointing downwards. Jonathan Majors; Grace Jabbari. AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews; AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews

  • Jonathan Majors' 911 call, made after he found his accuser unconscious, was played at his trial in New York.
  • Business Insider exclusively obtained audio recordings of the call.
  • Majors feared ex-Grace Jabbari had tried to take his own life; The doctors found no evidence of this.

“Hey, how are you, this is medical,” Jonathan Majors tells the 911 dispatcher.

“It’s a suicide attempt, I think.”

These are the Marvel star's first tense words in a March 911 call that prosecutors played to a jury on Tuesday in his misdemeanor domestic violence case in Manhattan.

“Penthouse D,” the “Kang the Conquerer” actor tells the dispatcher at the start of the four-minute call, giving the address of his triplex apartment in Manhattan’s expensive Chelsea neighborhood.

Two NYPD officers testified that they found no pill bottles or other drugs at the scene, supporting Majors' fears that the ex-girlfriend, choreographer Grace Jabbari, had attempted to take her own life.

Prosecutors are trying to prove that Majors broke his ex-girlfriend's finger and hit her in the head with an open hand late on the evening of March 24 in an incident that spilled from her chauffeur-driven car onto the streets of Chinatown had. He has denied the allegations.

After the fight that night, the two went their separate ways. Majors, 34, claims Jabbari, 30, injured herself after drinking for hours at a nightclub and then falling alone in his triplex apartment.

The star wasn't arrested by the NYPD until late morning on March 25, when he rushed back to his triplex from his hotel out of fear that she had tried to take her own life because of her late-night news reports, according to evidence from both sides.

The call that summoned first responders to his penthouse that morning would also lead to his arrest.

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“D as in David,” the dispatcher says at the beginning of the call, repeating Major’s speech and informing him that a “crew” is already coming his way.

Just moments earlier, Majors had called a building employee to break down his bedroom door, which he returned home to find locked from the inside.

According to defense documents, Jabbari was lying unconscious on the floor of the walk-in closet.

“Um, I stayed in a hotel last night,” he says later in the phone call. “I came home this morning. I knocked on the door. I’ve been in the apartment for about 40 minutes now.”

“I'm knocking on the door. I couldn't get in. Finally I went downstairs and asked the doorman to help us and they let me in via the handyman. She’s 30 years old, a white woman,” he adds of Jabbari.

When the dispatcher asks if she has a mental health history, Majors replies, “I would say maybe.” She has a history – “

The dispatcher interrupts.

“What's her name?”

“Grace Caitlyn Mocasa Jabbari,” Majors replies.

When asked what she might have taken, he replies: “No, I don’t know. Because she was just unconscious on the floor.”

The dispatcher tells him, “No problem, sir, I’ll take you to EMS. Don't hang up, okay? You’re already on your way, okay?”

Majors tells a male emergency responder who next answers the call that Jabbari is not awake but is breathing.

“What should I do? What should I do?” he asks. He is told to make sure the doors are open for first responders.

“She didn't fall and hit her head or anything else that you know of,” the paramedic asks.

“I think I saw a cut behind her ear, um. Yes,” Majors tells him, describing an injury that prosecutors now say he caused.

He is told to keep an eye on Jabbari's breathing when Majors says, “They just came in.”

At the end of the call, there is a garbled portion of the tape in which Majors appears to be speaking to another person who is not on the phone, telling them, “She's unconscious.” Can we just keep this confidential?”

The tape was played in the afternoon as prosecutors presented evidence of the police and emergency services response at the major's home before his arrest.

Jabbari was taken to Bellevue Hospital to be treated for a cut behind her ear and a broken finger and to undergo a psychological evaluation.

The defense is expected to begin presenting its case on Wednesday. They are expected to present evidence to the jury in support of the Majors' counter-complaint against Jabbari, who they say stole his property and was the aggressor in their fight.

Jabbari was arrested based on his complaint, but the Manhattan District Attorney's Office declined to prosecute.

Anyone experiencing abuse and needing support can contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline (1-800-799-7233). Attorneys are available 24/7 and can also be reached via live chat at thehotline.org or by texting “START” to 88788 or “LOVEIS” to 22522.

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