A death that occurred at Magic Kingdom Park on April 24 is only now coming to light, and the reason it stayed hidden for more than a month comes down to a technical outage that kept dozens of emergency calls from reaching the public record.
What the Updated Logs Reveal

Scanner monitoring outlet WDWActiveCrime recently discovered that a feed outage on April 24 and April 25 resulted in 64 law enforcement calls in the Walt Disney World Resort area going untracked in real time. Among those missing calls was a “dead person” response at Magic Kingdom Park, logged at 11:46 a.m. on April 24, 2026.
April now includes a Dead Person call for Magic Kingdom.
April now includes a Dead Person call for Magic Kingdom.
— Walt Disney World: Active Calls (@WDWActiveCrime) May 28, 2026
The call was registered to 1460 Magic Kingdom Dr, Bay Lake — the general address Walt Disney World Resort provides when summoning first responders to the Magic Kingdom. That address refers to the property as a whole rather than a specific location within the original Central Florida Disney park, so the exact spot where the incident occurred remains unknown.

No further details about the individual who died at Magic Kingdom Park on April 24 have been made available. As is standard with medical incidents at the Central Florida Disney parks, the guest's identity has not been publicized. Names in these situations are typically only made public in cases involving suicide or when the family of the deceased chooses to come forward.
Other Calls That Were Missed
The 64 calls lost during the April 24 and April 25 feed outage also included two “person down” responses that were flagged in the updated logs. The first came in at 1:04 a.m. on April 24 at Disney Springs, and the second was logged at 3:31 p.m. the same day at Disney's Hollywood Studios.

A “person down” call sometimes precedes a more serious outcome, but in both of these cases, the individuals involved appear to have been treated by paramedics or transported to a hospital. No additional information has been released about either incident.
Walt Disney World Resort did not issue any statement regarding the April 24 death at Magic Kingdom Park.
Should Walt Disney World Resort be allowed to suppress public information about deaths on its property? Share your thoughts with Disney Fanatic in the comments.



