Illinois deputies learn how to deal with
mentally ill
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[June 25, 2016]
By Justin Madden
RIVER GROVE, Ill. (Reuters) - As law
enforcement officers across the United States feel the heat about
excessive use of force, dealing with the mentally ill was the training
focus for Cook County sheriff's deputies this week.
Participants grappled with intense scenarios, such as a man who
believes his wife and brother are having an affair, and who refuses
to take his medication and then holds a knife to his own throat. The
week-long training took place at Triton College near Chicago.
"Someone who is suffering from mental illness is no different than
that person who is having that asthma attack or the person who is
having that heart attack," said Bob Maas, a crisis intervention
trainer and 16-year sheriff's deputy. "The only difference is that
their illness is in their head, so why would you want to arrest
somebody?"
However, subjecting the mentally ill to arrest and use of excessive
force is a frequent criticism leveled at many law enforcement
agencies nationwide. In some cases, such incidents have resulted in
high-profile deaths that leave everyone demanding more training for
law enforcement.
The nonprofit Treatment Advocacy Center said in a 2015 report that
Americans with mental illness are 16 times more likely to be killed
by police than other civilians. The advocacy group said at least a
quarter of the hundreds of Americans killed by police annually are
severely mentally ill.
In Chicago last year, the fatal shooting by city police of
19-year-old Quintonio LeGrier, who suffered from mental issues
according to relatives, sparked a national discussion about officer
training for dealing with the mentally ill.
LeGrier had called police three times asking for help before he was
shot, but the dispatcher hung up on him when he would not give his
name. As a result of the shooting death of LeGrier, Chicago in
January announced reforms, including new training, in dealing with
the mentally ill.
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Bob Maas (L), a Crisis Intervention Training Instructor and 16-year
Cook County Sheriff's deputy, acts as person with schizophrenia
during a training at Triton College in River Grove, Illinois,
U.S. June 23, 2016 as deputies learn how to interact with the
mentally ill. REUTERS/Justin Madden
This week, Cook County jail deputies and correctional officers
received training - using role playing and plastic blue guns - on
how to deal with people who are having a severe episode and are
potentially violent. An estimated one-third of the jail's inmates
have some form of mental illnesses.
"The reality is, Cook County jail is now a mental health hospital
and sheriff's police officers are now pseudo-psychologists,
pseudo-social workers, and that's just the reality that was handed
to us," Cook County sheriff's spokesman Ben Breit said.
(Editing by Ben Klayman and Matthew Lewis)
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