911 Calls Reveal Woman’s Traumatic Escape After She Jumped out of Moving Car

The harrowing 911 call made by a college student after she escaped a kidnapping last month by [...]

The harrowing 911 call made by a college student after she escaped a kidnapping last month by jumping out of a moving car has now been released by authorities.

South Carolina college student, Jordan Dinsmore, 20, tells Inside Edition she was robbed and kidnapped at gunpoint by three attackers, while pulling into her apartment complex after work at around 1 a.m. local time.

Narrowly escaping abduction and robbery by the three who threatened rape, the attackers were later thwarted by not knowing how to driver her manual transmission car with Dinsmore doing the unthinkable by jumping out of the moving car.

In the phone calls obtained by Inside Edition, the 911 dispatcher can be heard getting information from an eyewitness who saw Dinsmore.

"I have a young lady running in the middle of the road, screaming for someone to help her," a witness told the 911 dispatcher. "She said she was being robbed."

Law enforcement has nicknamed the 20-year-old, "James Bond" as she quickly thought what to do. Breathless, Dinsmore managed to get on the phone and tell the 911 operator what had happened.

"Please help me," she tells the dispatcher. "I just got off work. They were hiding behind cars. And they jumped out with a gun and held it to my head. They made me go to the ATM at Wells Fargo, by the gas station and take out money for them, and they took every cent I own, everything I had on me. I had to jump out."

When the dispatcher asked when the incident had taken place, Dinsmore reiterates "five minutes ago," saying that her car was abandoned.

"I had to jump out of it while it was moving to get away from them," she said.

Dinsmore, a criminal justice major at the University of South Carolina is studying to become an FBI agent. She recently had the chance to meet up with the Asst. Special Agent in Charge to discuss her heroism.

The 20-year-old hero further described the ordeal to Inside Edition saying she was in a state of "instant panic."

"I don't even remember making the decision to do it, it kind of just happened," she said. "The last thing I remember is seeing the pavement and the white lines underneath me. Then I just blacked out."

Emotionally distraught, Dinsmore said the situation felt like an "out of body" experience, stating it felt it wasn't really happening to her.

"This doesn't happen to real people — but it does," she said.

Raquan Green, 17, faces charges of armed robbery, kidnapping and weapons possession. He was arrested in July for his alleged role in the crime, but while his case is still pending, he has not entered a plea. Following Green's arrest, two others were taken into custody, but their indentities will not be made public as they are juveniles.

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