"I need you here. I need you here immediately," he said.
When the 911 operator asked if she was bleeding and not conscious, Conor Hanlon can be heard screaming, "No!"
"Oh, oh my god. Oh my god. Oh my god," Hanlon can be heard saying while hyperventilating.
Conor Hanlon has obtained a lawyer and has been communicating with investigators, the Morris County Prosecutor's Office previously said.
Fox News Digital previously obtained a Computer-Aided Dispatch (CAD) log of a 911 call made at the home on June 6, which was initially reported as a "Cardiac or Respiratory Arrest."
The 911 call was placed at 4:29 p.m., and at 4:42 p.m., a dispatcher entered a "suspicious death" note on the file.
One of the Hanlons' neighbors told Fox News Digital, "There was a lot of activity out there on the 6th. I'd talked to Conor a few times before. We mostly texted. We've lived here about a year, and he'd text me whenever bears were around."
Court records show Conor Hanlon has no prior arrests or criminal history. He hasn't been accused of any crime nor wrongdoing.