I listened to the 911 tape, it's chilling, you can hear the fear in his voice. I was curious about this, it was over 3 minutes into the call before the 911 operator asks Chris if he knows CPR. I wonder if that's typical. The dispatcher did have to call someone else to send out the ambulance first and tell them the location, before asking, "Is he breathing? Do you know CPR?".
I know everyone here hates speculation, but TMZ is speculating that Soules will be charged, but not prosecuted in this death, since he did call 911, gave his real name, and "attempted to administer CPR" by checking the pulse. And he left the scene only after he was sure the ambulance was arriving. I'm only commenting on that because I am curious how the law works on that, so is it legally allowed to "leave the scene" when help arrives even if you caused the accident? (Not that I'd ever do that, I just wonder what the law states). Seems to me like it wouldn't be legal, but maybe they charge someone with a lesser offense in that case since he did call 911 before leaving. I don't know.