A 911 call has revealed more details about the tragic death of Tommy Lee Jones’ daughter, Victoria Jones.
In a dispatch audio, obtained by TMZ on Friday, a call for the incident came in as a “code 3 for the overdose, color change.”
An overdose with a “color change” usually refers to cyanosis, which is a “discoloration of the skin, lips or fingernails caused by a lack of oxygen in the blood,” per the Cleveland Clinic.
Victoria was found unresponsive on the 14th floor of the Fairmont San Francisco Hotel in the early hours of New Year’s Day, Page Six confirmed Thursday night.
A hotel guest initially found her and called hotel staff believing she was passed out drunk, per the Daily Mail.
Paramedics were then called for a medical emergency at the hotel’s address at 2:52 a.m., a fire department spokesperson told us.
“Bystanders were given instructions for CPR according to CAD records,” the spokesperson said.
However, she was pronounced dead on the scene after paramedics arrived.
Authorities with the San Franscico Police Department then arrived on scene at 3:14 a.m. local time, per the Daily Mail, and the case was turned over to them for further investigation.
Per the outlet, there was no sign of foul play. Drug paraphernalia was not found at the scene either and there’s no indication that her death was a suidice.
Her cause of death is still unknown.
Per the outlet, it’s still unclear if she was a guest at the hotel or how she got to the 14th floor.
A rep for Tommy Lee did not immediately return Page Six’s request for comment.
Victoria initially followed in her dad’s acting footsteps when she appeared in “Men In Black II,” “One Tree Hill” and in “The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada,” which was directed by her dad.
The actor — who shared Victoria with Kimberlea Cloughley — gushed to the New Yorker in 2006 that Victoria is “a good actress, has her sag card, speaks impeccable Spanish.”
“When she was a baby, I told Leticia, her nurse, to speak to her in Spanish,” he further said.
Though she has since stepped away from acting, she sometimes supported her father on red carpets.
If you or someone you care about is affected by any of the issues raised in this story, call SAMHSA’s National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).
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