6 min read Friendly Dogs Will Do Anything For Attention — Even Call The Cops 16 Times “He didn’t believe it was the dogs at all until he heard the 911 tape.”

Meet Remy and Bomber — two attention-loving pups who will go to great lengths to get what they want, even if it means getting the cops involved.

On Thursday morning, the Lakeville Police Department in Minnesota received a strange phone call. The 911 dispatcher answered the phone and was met with only silence on the other end of the line. From there, the mystery only deepened. When officers Michelle Roberts and Emily Bares arrived at the location of the calls, the house was locked and seemingly empty. However, both officers knew that was impossible. “By the time we got there they had gotten three more 911 calls in that span of time,” Officer Roberts told The Dodo. “In a couple of them they heard dogs barking in the background, but no human voices at all.”

Twitter/Lakeville Police

After a walk around the property, both officers left — but the calls kept coming in. So Roberts decided to return and attempt to make contact one last time. She found a cell phone number for the homeowner and obtained the code for the garage. “I was more concerned because I thought there was a human in there who can’t talk or move and just keeps calling for help,” Roberts said. “I never thought it was the dogs, that’s for sure.” As soon as she entered, she was met by a hound mix and his Papillon partner in crime. The two dogs seemed a bit bashful about the trouble they had caused, but they were ultimately pleased with the results. “They barked at first and then they were a little timid,” Roberts said. “But that didn’t last very long. They just wanted to be pet and they were super friendly.”

Twitter/Lakeville Police

Roberts wandered into the home office and, sure enough, a forgotten cell phone lay on the desk. “It was on ‘emergency call only,’ so the dogs would have only had to hit the screen with their paw or their nose and that would have enabled them to call 911,” Roberts explained. Roberts theorized that the approximately 45-pound hound could have reached the phone if he stood on his hind legs or, more likely, could have jumped up on the desk chair to reach the phone.