黑料不打烊 Note: Although there are tens of thousands of trained CIT teams implemented across the country, there are still regions and states that lag far behind in adequate training for public safety officers. As this article highlights, individual advocacy can challenge traditional expectations of how police response can be valued in the community, and is based out of need and often personal sorrow and regret; half of all people killed by police every year have a mental health condition, each one of them with a family and community affected by their absence. 黑料不打烊 has been working with advocate groups around the state to implement CIT in a concerted way that relates to fidelity training and reliable statewide coordinators connected to crisis and behavioral health resources.
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How Lack of Police Training Can Be Deadly for the Mentally Ill
Al Jazeera America; Aaron Ernst, 4/25/2014
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In the mornings, Keith Vidal-Wilsey would ask his mom if she wanted a cup of hot chocolate. Every night, he would tell her he loved her. He liked banging out hard rock riffs on his drum kit, and enjoyed when it snowed. He was also schizophrenic.
On one occasion, Keith tried to hurt himself. He tried to drink bleach and then wrapped a vacuum cord around his neck. With the help of local police, his mother, Mary Wilsey, got her son to the hospital for treatment. And she wanted to do the same earlier this year.
On Jan. 5,听Keith had picked up a small screwdriver听and was scaring her. She asked her husband to call 911. Two officers arrived, she said, and started calmly听speaking with the 18-year-old. Then, she said a third officer from another police force showed up and escalated the situation, which quickly spiraled out of control. Less than a minute later, Keith had been tased and was struggling with the first two officers to arrive.
鈥淭hen, I heard the gun go off and saw my son start bleeding,鈥 she said.
The third officer, Bryon Vassey of the Southport Police Department, had shot her son. Keith died in an ambulance on the way to the hospital.听Vassey was indicted for voluntary manslaughter. His attorney said his client had to make a split-second decision and was protecting the lives of the other officers.
鈥淲hen a child gets killed, you not only grieve for their loss, but you also grieve for everything that should have happened,鈥 said Wilsey, explaining through tears that she鈥檒l never see her son graduate, or get married. 鈥淲hat ended up happening is my son ended up dead听because this individual was not trained to handle a mentally ill person.鈥
Police become providers
According to experts, conventional police training can actually inflame encounters with the mentally ill.
In March, police confronted a homeless man named James Boyd, who was illegally camping in the New Mexico foothills.听听released by the police department showed Boyd picking up his belongings when an officer hit him with a flash-bang device, which was followed by screams of 鈥淕et on the ground.鈥 Then, Boyd pulled out a knife, and the police fired multiple rounds at him. He was pronounced dead the next day.
鈥淭raditional law enforcement tactics are rooted in logic, in reasoning 鈥 and in issuing commands for someone to comply so that we can make the situation safe right now by taking a person into custody,鈥 said Douglas County Police Capt. Attila Denes, who has spent much of his career in the Douglas County Sheriff鈥檚 Office in Colorado trying to improve police interaction with the mentally ill. 鈥淏ut barking orders at a person with serious mental illness doesn’t work.鈥澨
And encounters between the police and the people with mental illness have been rising. In the last few decades, mental health hospitals have shuttered and services have been slashed, leaving more of the mentally ill without support and places for treatment. Prisons are now home to听听mentally ill Americans than state psychiatric hospitals. And at least half of the people shot and killed by police in the U.S. every year have mental health problems, according to a听.
A different approach
Whoa whoa whoa whoa! What the f**k are you doing!?
Relax, relax, relax.
I am relaxed! You relax! Who the f**k are you?
Are you OK?听
Role-playing is a key part of crisis intervention team training or CIT, in which officers are taught how to better identify and interact with the mentally ill. At this 40-hour training in Colorado, an actor plays a person with mental health problems, and the police officers take what they鈥檝e learned in class 鈥 how to pick up on the signals, how to react 鈥 and try to implement them in the heat of the moment.听
鈥淥h, they鈥檙e very realistic,鈥 said Mike Hanifan, an officer in the training. 鈥淒uring one of the scenarios you can actually feel the sweat dripping down inside your shirt, because you put yourself in that situation.鈥
Half of the state鈥檚 police officers are now trained in the approach, and it seems to be working. Colorado deploys fewer SWAT teams and saves money by diverting the mentally ill from prisons, according to 10 years of data, collected in cooperation with Harvard Medical School, which hasn’t yet been published.听Nationwide, CIT officers are injured 80 percent less than untrained officers in interactions with the mentally ill.
Officer Chad Walker said the training has clearly helped him in real-life situations, like when he got a call about a 10-year-old with autism, who had a knife.
鈥淗e looked at us and started walking toward us with the knife in his hands,鈥 Walker recounted. 鈥淲e knew this person by name, called him by his first name, asked him how he was feeling. And he dropped the knife, and came to us and started listening to us.鈥
But despite this proven track record, only 10 percent of the nation鈥檚 25,000 police departments require crisis intervention training. In North Carolina, where Keith was killed, only one in five officers receive the training.听
Keith鈥檚 Law
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the kind of training I would like for all my officers to have 鈥 at some point,鈥 said Montrina Sutton, the chief of police in Burgaw, N.C., a small town a few dozen miles away from where Keith was shot. 鈥淏ut because of my small agency and I have a small budget, it makes it really hard.鈥
Sutton said she鈥檚 noticed that more veterans are returning to town with mental health issues, and that the officers have to deal with that 鈥渢he best way we know how.鈥
But she鈥檚 deeply concerned about the lack of formal training. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 just like if I am not able to send an officer to the range to learn how to use his weapon,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd if he gets into a situation where he needs to use it, but he didn鈥檛 know how because he鈥檚 not trained.鈥
After Keith鈥檚 death, in lieu of CIT, Sutton鈥檚 department听听called Special Awareness Verification Enrollment, or S.A.V.E. Residents can register with the police any household member with a mental illness, and an officer who is dispatched to that home then receives that background information before he or she arrives on scene.听
Since her son鈥檚 death, Mary Wilsey has become a fierce advocate of CIT.
鈥淲hat happened in my home that day, I felt there was people that were not qualified to handle a mentally ill person,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd if you’re not qualified, what the heck are you听doing in my home? Get out. You should not be here.鈥
She submitted听听to her state representative called Keith鈥檚 Law, which would make CIT mandatory for all officers in North Carolina. She called it 鈥渃ommon sense.鈥
鈥淭rain them so they can handle the population that they deal with every day,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y goal is to prevent another family from going through a terrible tragedy that has ruined our lives.鈥
For Wilsey, she plans on lobbying for the bill for as long as it takes until it鈥檚 passed.
鈥淎nd then, I鈥檓 going to I’m going to Virginia,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I’m听going to Maryland. And then, I’m going anywhere I can go and get anybody I can to listen to me.鈥
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