Don’t Call
the Cops If You’re Autistic, Deaf, Mentally Ill,
Disabled or Old
By John W.
Whitehead
“Anyone who cares for someone with a
developmental disability, as well as for
disabled people themselves
[lives] every day in fear
that their behavior will be misconstrued as
suspicious, intoxicated or hostile by law
enforcement.”—Steve Silberman,
The New York Times
October 24,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Life in the American police state is an endless
series of don’ts delivered at the end of a loaded
gun: don’t talk back to police officers, don’t even
think about defending yourself against a SWAT team
raid (of which there are 80,000 every year), don’t
run when a cop is nearby lest you be mistaken for a
fleeing criminal, don’t carry a cane lest it be
mistaken for a gun, don’t expect privacy in public,
don’t let your kids walk to the playground alone,
don’t engage in nonviolent protest near where a
government official might pass, don’t try to grow
vegetables in your front yard, don’t play music for
tips in a metro station, don’t feed whales, and on
and on.
Here’s
another don’t to the add the growing list of things
that could get you or a loved one tasered, shot or
killed, especially if you are autistic, hearing
impaired, mentally ill, elderly, suffer from
dementia, disabled or have any other condition that
might hinder your ability to understand, communicate
or immediately comply with an order: don’t call the
cops.
Sometimes
it’s dangerous enough calling the cops when you’re
not contending with a disability.
For
instance, Justine
Damond called 911 to report a disturbance and ended
up dead after
police dispatched to investigate instead shot the
40-year-old yoga instructor. Likewise, Carl Williams
called 911 to report a robbery and ended up being
shot by police, who
mistook him for a robber in his own home.
Unfortunately, the risks just skyrocket when a
disability is involved.
Nancy
Schrock
called 911 for help after her husband, Tom, who
suffered with mental health issues, started stalking
around the backyard, upending chairs and screaming
about demons.
Several times before, police had transported Tom to
the hospital, where he was medicated and sent home
after 72 hours. This time, Tom was tasered twice. He
collapsed, lost consciousness and died.
The
Schrocks are not alone in this experience.
Indeed,
disabled individuals make up a third
to half of all people killed by law enforcement
officers.
That’s according to a study by the Ruderman Family
Foundation, which reports that “disabled
individuals make up the majority of those killed in
use-of-force cases
that attract widespread attention. This is true both
for cases deemed illegal or against policy and for
those in which officers are ultimately fully
exonerated… Many more disabled civilians experience
non-lethal violence and abuse at the hands of law
enforcement officers.”
Trained to
shoot first and ask questions later, police pose a
risk to anyone with special needs whose disabilities
may not be immediately apparent or require more
finesse than the typical freeze-or-I’ll-shoot
tactics employed by America’s police forces.
For
example, in South Carolina, police tasered an
86-year-old grandfather reportedly in the early
stages of dementia,
while he was jogging backwards away from them.
Now this happened after Albert Chatfield led police
on a car chase, running red lights and turning
randomly. However, at the point that police chose to
shock the old man with electric charges, he was out
of the car, on his feet, and outnumbered by police
officers much younger than him.
In
Georgia, campus police shot and killed a 21-year-old
student who was suffering a mental health crisis.
Scout
Schultz was shot through the heart
by campus police when he approached four of them
late one night while holding a pocketknife, shouting
“Shoot me!” Although police may have feared for
their lives, the blade was still in its closed
position.
In
Oklahoma, police
shot and killed a 35-year-old deaf man
seen holding a two-foot metal pipe on his front
porch (he used the pipe to fend off stray dogs while
walking). Despite the fact that witnesses warned
police that Magdiel Sanchez couldn’t hear—and thus
comply—with their shouted orders to drop the pipe
and get on the ground, police shot the man when he
was about 15 feet away from them.
In
Maryland,
police (moonlighting as security guards) used
extreme force to eject a 26-year-old man with Downs
Syndrome and a low IQ
from a movie theater after the man insisted on
sitting through a second screening of a film.
Autopsy results indicate that Ethan Saylor died of
complications arising from asphyxiation, likely
caused by a chokehold.
In
Florida,
police armed with assault rifles fired three shots
at a 27-year-old nonverbal, autistic man
who was sitting on the ground, playing with a toy
truck. Police missed the autistic man and instead
shot his behavioral therapist, Charles Kinsey, who
had been trying to get him back to his group home.
The therapist,
bleeding from a gunshot wound,
was then handcuffed and left lying face down on the
ground for 20 minutes.
In
Texas,
police handcuffed, tasered and then used a baton to
subdue a 7-year-old student who has severe ADHD and
a mood disorder.
With school counselors otherwise occupied, school
officials called police and the child’s mother to
assist after Yosio Lopez started banging his head on
a wall. The police arrived first.
In
New Mexico,
police tasered, then opened fire on a 38-year-old
homeless man who suffered from schizophrenia,
all in an attempt to get James Boyd to leave a
makeshift campsite. Boyd’s death provoked a wave of
protests over heavy-handed law enforcement tactics.
In
Ohio,
police forcefully subdued a 37-year-old bipolar
woman wearing only
a nightgown in near-freezing temperatures who was
neither armed, violent, intoxicated, nor suspected
of criminal activity. After being slammed onto the
sidewalk, handcuffed and left unconscious on the
street, Tanisha Anderson died as a result of being
restrained in a prone position.
And
in North Carolina, a
state trooper shot and killed a 29-year-old deaf
motorist after he
failed to pull over during a traffic stop. Daniel K.
Harris was shot after exiting his car, allegedly
because the trooper
feared he might be reaching for a weapon.
These
cases, and the hundreds—if not thousands—more that
go undocumented every year speak to a crisis in
policing when it comes to law enforcement’s failure
to adequately assess, de-escalate and manage
encounters with special needs or disabled
individuals.
While the
research is relatively scant, what has been
happening is telling.
Over
the course of six months,
police shot and killed someone who was in mental
crisis every 36 hours.
Among
124 police killings analyzed by The Washington
Post in which mental illness appeared to be a
factor, “They were
overwhelmingly men, more than half of them white.
Nine in 10 were armed with some kind of weapon, and
most died close to home.”
But
there were also important distinctions,
reports the
Post.
“This
group was more likely to wield a weapon less
lethal than a firearm.
Six had toy guns; 3 in 10 carried a blade, such
as a knife or a machete — weapons that rarely
prove deadly to police officers. According to
data maintained by the FBI and other
organizations, only three officers have been
killed with an edged weapon in the past decade.
Nearly a dozen of the mentally distraught people
killed were military veterans, many of them
suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder as
a result of their service, according to police
or family members. Another was a former
California Highway Patrol officer who had been
forced into retirement after enduring a severe
beating during a traffic stop that left him
suffering from depression and PTSD.
And in 45 cases, police were called to help
someone get medical treatment, or after the
person had tried and failed to get treatment on
his own.”
The U.S.
Supreme Court, as might be expected, has thus far
continued to immunize police against charges of
wrongdoing when it comes to use of force against
those with a mental illness.
In a
2015 ruling, the Court declared that
police could not be sued for forcing their way into
a mentally ill woman’s room at a group home and
shooting her five times when she advanced on them
them with a knife.
The justices did not address whether police must
take special precautions when arresting mentally ill
individuals. (The
Americans with Disabilities Act
requires “reasonable accommodations” for people with
mental illnesses, which in this case might have been
less confrontational tactics.)
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Where does
this leave us?
For
starters, we need better police training across the
board, but especially when it comes to de-escalation
tactics and crisis intervention.
A
study by the National Institute of Mental Health
found that CIT (Crisis Intervention Team)-trained
officers made fewer arrests, used less force, and
connected more people with mental-health services
than their non-trained peers.
As The
Washington Post points out:
“Although new recruits typically spend nearly 60
hours learning to handle a gun, according to a
recent survey by the Police Executive Research
Forum, they receive only eight hours of training
to de-escalate tense situations and eight hours
learning strategies for handling the mentally
ill. Otherwise,
police are taught to employ tactics that tend to
be counterproductive in such encounters,
experts said. For example, most officers are
trained to seize control when dealing with an
armed suspect, often through stern, shouted
commands. But yelling and pointing guns is ‘like
pouring gasoline on a fire when you do that with
the mentally ill,’ said Ron Honberg, policy
director with the National Alliance on Mental
Illness.”
Second, police need to
learn how to slow confrontations down,
instead of ramping up the tension (and the noise).
After
Ethan Saylor’s death in Maryland, police recruits
are now required to take a four-hour course in which
they learn “de-escalation tactics” for dealing with
disabled individuals:
speak calmly, give space, be patient.
One
officer in charge of the Los Angeles Police
Department’s “mental response teams” suggests that
instead of rushing to take someone into custody,
police should try to slow things down and persuade
the person to come with them.
Third, with all the questionable funds flowing to
police departments these days, why not use some of
those funds to establish what one disability-rights
activist describes as “a
911-type number dedicated to handling mental-health
emergencies, with
community crisis-response teams at the ready rather
than police officers.”
In the end,
while we need to make encounters with police
officers safer for people with disabilities, what we
really need is to make encounters with police safer
for citizens across the board, no matter how they’re
packaged.
As I
point out in my book
Battlefield America: The War on the American
People, the
problem is not that police officers are inherently
bad—in fact, there are many good, caring officers in
law enforcement—but when cops are trained to be
military warriors instead of peace officers, we’re
all viewed as potential threats.
Constitutional attorney and
author John W. Whitehead is founder and president
of The
Rutherford Institute. His new book Battlefield
America: The War on the American People (SelectBooks,
2015) is available online at www.amazon.com.
Whitehead can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org
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