Introduction

The Second Ambulance: A New Mystery in the Death of Elvis Presley
For nearly five decades, the world has accepted the official narrative of August 16, 1977: Elvis Presley was found unresponsive at Graceland, rushed by a single ambulance to Baptist Memorial Hospital, and pronounced dead. however, a newly surfaced document—a Memphis Fire Department dispatch log obtained through a Freedom of Information request—threatens to dismantle this long-standing history. The log reveals a shocking detail: two ambulances left Graceland that afternoon, not one.
The Mystery of Unit 19
The first ambulance, Unit 6, is the one the public knows. It departed the front gates at 2:47 p.m. with the King’s body. Yet, at that exact same moment, the dispatch logs show Unit 19 was ordered to the rear service entrance of Graceland. Unlike the emergency run to the hospital, this second unit was classified as a “medical transport” for a “stable patient.” Most chillingly, its destination was not a hospital, but Arrow Drive—the service road for private aviation at Memphis International Airport.
Theories of a Cover-Up
This revelation has sparked three primary theories regarding what—or who—was inside that second vehicle:
1. The Evidence Sanitization: By 1977, Elvis’s physician, Dr. George Nichopoulos, had prescribed him over 10,000 doses of narcotics and sedatives in just eight months. Some believe the second ambulance was used to spirit away incriminating medical evidence—pill bottles and records—to a private jet before police could secure the scene.

2. The Disappearing Witness: Another theory suggests a person who “knew too much” was removed from the property. This aligns with a 1988 account from a Graceland housekeeper who claimed to see unidentified men in suits carrying something wrapped in a white sheet out the back door.
3. The Timeline Anomaly: Forensic evidence adds fuel to the fire. When Elvis was measured at the hospital at 3:30 p.m., his core temperature was 89°F. Given the physics of body cooling, this suggests he may have died as early as 10:30 a.m., hours before the official discovery. This gap would have provided ample time for Colonel Tom Parker to orchestrate a “managed” death.
The Paper Trail to Mexico
The mystery deepens with FAA records showing a private Learjet, owned by a shell company linked to Colonel Parker, filed a flight plan for Cancun, Mexico, just 11 minutes before the second ambulance arrived at the airport.
While the official stance remains that these logs are clerical errors, the legal pushback suggests otherwise. Recent attempts to unredact these files have been met with federal sealing orders. Whether the second ambulance carried evidence, a witness, or a darker secret, it serves as a haunting reminder that even in death, the “King” was a man trapped within a machine that prioritized the legend over the truth.