Jeremy Renner heard in 911 call moaning in pain after getting run over by a snowplow as his neighbor cried out 'He's been crushed!'
- Actor Jeremy Renner could be heard moaning in pain in a 911 call after his snowplow injury.
- "He's been crushed!" a man tells a dispatcher in the call, which was obtained by Insider.
Marvel star Jeremy Renner could be heard moaning in pain in a 911 call after the actor was run over by his own snowplow near his home in Nevada earlier this month.
"Immediately! Someone's been run over by a snowcat! Hurry!" a neighbor of Renner's told a dispatcher, according to the 911 tape obtained by Insider on Wednesday.
The caller continued: "Someone's in front of my house on the ground. He got run over by a snowcat. He's been crushed! Send paramedics, ambulance."
The partly redacted, 20-minute 911 call released by the Truckee Meadows Fire and Rescue reveals the chaotic aftermath of the New Year's Day incident that left Renner in intensive care with blunt chest trauma and serious injuries.
The 52-year-old "Hawkeye" star was run over by his seven-ton PistenBully in a "tragic accident" as he was using the snowplow to clear the road near his home in Lake Tahoe, authorities have said.
In the 911 call made at about 8:55 a.m. local time, Renner's neighbor can be heard pleading for help to come quickly as he relayed to a dispatcher that Renner was "barely" awake, in "rough shape," and that there was "a lot of blood."
"We just need someone right away with life-saving techniques," the man told the dispatcher.
He added, "There's a lot of blood over here so you got to get someone over here immediately."
The man explained to the dispatcher that Renner — who was lying wounded and bloodied in the snowy road at the time — "got crushed up on his right side."
"His right chest and the upper torso, his ribs, they look like they might be crushed. He's got a head wound as well," the caller said.
Renner could be heard moaning in the background as others tried to tend to him and stop the bleeding.
"His breaths are getting shorter, so please," the caller begged to the dispatcher who told him medics were taking longer to get there because of the snow.
"You're going to be alright, brother," the man could be heard telling Renner during the call. "This is just pain here, so deal with that and you'll be alright. We'll get you out of here."
About 17 minutes into the 911 call, the dispatcher asked how Renner was doing, prompting the neighbor to reply: "Shallow breath, a lot of pain. He's conscious. We've got him covered in blankets, his head's covered."
"Don't be drifting off," the man says to Renner shortly before he confirms to the dispatcher that he sees the emergency responders in the distance.
Renner, a two-time Oscar nominee, was ultimately airlifted to a hospital where he remained for two weeks.
He shared with fans on Tuesday that he had returned home.