Okay,,,,thats quite a lot to answer but I will give the inquisition a shot - I don't know that I'd call it an inquisition, so much as a clarification. You are indignant at Disney's handling of this, yet, as we get more detail, it doesn't seem as if it was as harrowing an experience as you would like us to believe. But, calling it an inquisition is a good way to attempt to gerner some support for what is turning out to be a bit of a weak story.
1 - Yes my wife was that scared and mad. She didn't think about calling the police, just the front desk. Quick, tell me the phone number of the police. Half of you probably have to look it up in the phone book in your home towns. The front desk people told her she did the right thing by calling them and that they would be sending someone over. I guess the expectation was that if someone calls the front desk saying that there is a person trying to talk his way into a room, the response should be almost immediate. No one thought about the police since we assumed that Disney security was very good and it would be handled. I guess we should have called them also in retrospect, because as of yet, no one has called to check on the situation. My suspicion is that the call got shuffled to the back burner. My suspicion is that the perosn who answered the phone didn't get the perception form your wife that she felt as if she was in any danger. The # for the police is 911. My guess is that if you dialed 911 on a Disney hpone and got the security, that it would get their attention. The front desk handles many things other than emergency complaints and security breaches.
2 - Yes, my work is further away than my home, plus it was Friday late afternoon with bumper to bumper. I will clock it for you on my next trip. No I didn't call the police either. So, your wife is alone in a hotel room, calls you to tell you that an agitated man is attempting to get into the roomm where she is, and it doesn't compel you to do anything??? Call the police, call Disney??? Nothing??? If you were my husband, I'd be pissed.
3 - I also posted that our friends arrived about the same time I did, and they were staying a couple of doors down. We did feel a bit more comfortable with them there. One man just had a stroke, and we got caught up in helping him. At this point it had been awhile and we were pretty confident that he wouldn't try again. What made you confident of the fact that a strange agitated man knocking on hotel room doors who was under the impression that your wife was alone, since you were not yet there the first time he knocked, wouldn't try again because he would assume that she was still alone?
4 - Yes "we" does include my wife. She left the room after a time period and she felt comfortable that he wasn't lurking outside the door. What made her feel comfortable about this? You are incensed at the lack of response, yet she "felt comfortable" leaving the room alone after this encounter.
5 - Yes she probably could have had them stay on the line. And should have.
6 - No, we never heard anything about it again. Well, you didn't make a huge issue of it, so what makes you think anyone owuld think it was a huge issue?
7 - We will be handling that in our letter. We had PR's at Tony's for 6:15. Guess that is where our priorities were. Once our friends came my wife felt better, but face it, after that length of time we didn't think he would be still there, or try again. See #4 aboveOn your last "important" note - you misunderstood the post. I am not saying that a woman couldn't have handled it. She really didn't know what was going on. She came only to read who has tried to come into the room, not confront a stranger trying to get access to a room.