Rob Pincus

Staging an Emergency Cell Phone

Rob Pincus
Sign in
Duration:   1  mins

In all our fundamentals of home defense tactics, we talk about communicating with 911, calling emergency services, and letting law enforcement know something bad is happening in our home.

Home Invasion Scenario

If you’re barricaded in your staging area with your family, whether you have a firearm or not, calling 911 is really important. But in this day and age, most houses don’t have landline phones in every room. And you may not have your cell phone on you when you get trapped somewhere in your home.

If you have a place in your home that you plan on going in the event of a home invasion or other break-in, a place where you might put a Tactical Walls clandestine quick-access storage unit, consider staging an emergency cell phone there along with your defensive firearm and med kit.

How to Stage an Emergency Cell Phone

Drill a hole in the bottom of the storage unit and run the charging cord of the emergency cell phone through it. Keep the cord plugged into the wall, and plug the phone into the other end to keep it charged.

What kind of phone? An old one, one you are not currently using. It can be an off-contract phone. It will still make an emergency call. Just touch the phone to wake it up, touch the word “emergency” on the lock screen, and it will take you to the screen that you can make the emergency call from.

Many people are not aware that off-contract cell phones will make an emergency call. You probably know it because you watch our home security tips videos here at PDN. So share this video with anyone who might not know that instead of tucking that old cell phone in a drawer, they can keep it charged and staged for emergency use.

Share tips, start a discussion or ask one of our experts or other students a question.

Make a comment:
500 characters remaining

3 Responses to “Staging an Emergency Cell Phone”

  1. John

    These old phones can't be called back if you are disconnected. Also lithium-ion batteries, which most cell phones use, have been widely reported to explode if over charged. It is recommend that these not be left plugged into a charger longer than necessary to maintain the charge.

  2. Geoff

    Keep in mind that cell phones, and especially ones off service, may not transmit an accurate location to 911 dispatchers, so giving the emergency operator the Where of the 5 Ws is important. And if you have passed a phone to a child to call, make sure the child can express the address. Thanks for the video tips.

  3. rt66paul

    using an old phone won't always give GPS location, so be sure your old phone can and is set up to do so.

Get exclusive premium content! Sign up for a membership now!