Chicago police department struggles with
officer suicide
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[May 04, 2017]
By Timothy Mclaughlin
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Rookie Chicago police
officer Scott Tracz sat in a black sports car outside his girlfriend's
suburban house late last year, put his gun to his head and fatally shot
himself.
The normally upbeat Tracz, 30, had become withdrawn and sullen,
struggling with the violence he witnessed as an officer but rejecting
advice from friends and family to seek help, fearing it would end his
career, relatives said.
"He said, 'I will lose my job,'" his cousin, Ark Maciaszek, said. "Just
like that."
Tracz is believed to be the latest contributor to the Chicago Police
Department's suicide rate, which stands 60 percent higher than the
national average according to a recent U.S. Department of Justice
report.
Critics say the problem has been exacerbated by a lack of mental health
resources. Chicago officials said they are working to improve their
mental health services.
The pressure on Chicago's police officers has intensified as the city
has dealt with a surge in murders and increased scrutiny around tactics
following the 2015 release of video showing the shooting death of black
teenager Laquan McDonald by a white officer.
In 2016, the number of murders in the city jumped nearly 60 percent to
over 760, more than New York and Los Angeles combined. There were more
than 4,300 shooting victims in the city last year, according to police.
The McDonald video sparked outrage and thrust Chicago into the
nationwide debate over police use of force. The subsequent Justice
Department report in January found Chicago police routinely violated
civil rights, and also cited suicide as a "significant problem" for the
city's officers.
"Chicago is a war zone," said Alexa James, the executive director of the
National Alliance on Mental Illness-Chicago. "They (officers) are seeing
the worst day of everybody’s life every day."
Chicago police's suicide rate was 29.4 per 100,000 department members
between 2013 and 2015, the report said, citing police union figures. The
department disagreed in the report, putting the rate at 22.7 suicides
per 100,000 members. Both estimates were higher than the national
average of 18.1 law enforcement suicides per 100,000.
RELUCTANT TO SEEK HELP
While each case contributing to Chicago's suicide rate is different,
interviews with mental health professionals and legal experts, as well
as current and former officers, reveal deep-rooted stigma for those
seeking help from its Employee Assistance Program (EAP).
Some officers believe that seeking counseling will result in the loss of
their Firearm Owner Identification Card, a requirement to carry a
firearm under state law, according to current and former officers, as
well as health officials. That view is mistaken, say Justice Department
officials.
Still, "If someone thinks I have talked to EAP they think I’m unstable,
so I’m not going to call," said one veteran officer, who asked not to be
identified.
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Ark Maciaszek poses with a photo of his cousin, former Chicago
police officer and suicide victim Scott Tracz, at his home in
Chicago, Illinois,
U.S. May 2, 2017. Picture taken May 2, 2017. REUTERS/Joshua Lott
Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said in February the
department's past approach to mental health was wrong. In a report
issued in March, the department said it would review mental wellness
support services.
"Law enforcement historically has been seen as a very macho
profession," Johnson said at a public forum about police reform. "To
say you needed help was seen as a sign of weakness and we were wrong
for looking at it that way, we were simply wrong."
Tracz had long dreamed of becoming a police officer to help others.
But working in the violence-stricken Chicago Lawn district, he came
face to face with the city's violent crime. The area accounted for
58 of the city's more than 760 murders last year, as well as 228
shootings.
"He would say, 'You can never imagine what the human race is capable
of doing,' then he would just put his head down," said his cousin
Maciaszek, 46. Tracz's relationship with his long-time girlfriend
also grew strained as he became more irritable and angry, Maciaszek
said.
Even if officers like Tracz had sought help they would have found
the department's resources strained. Three clinicians serve roughly
12,500 sworn officers and also their families, providing nearly
7,500 consultations in 2015, the Department of Justice said in its
report.
The program is hiring another psychologist, as well as another drug
and alcohol counselor, Robert Sobo, the department director of
counseling services, said in an interview. In addition, the unit has
four officers who serve as substance abuse counselors and a peer
support network, he said.
But this would still leave the department lagging other major police
cities of similar size. For example, Los Angeles Police has 14
trained psychologists and plans to hire two more for fewer than
10,000 sworn officers.
"Suicide is killing officers, alcohol is killing officers, at a far
greater rate than ambushes, but there is not the same sense of
urgency around this issue," said Christy Lopez, a former Justice
Department official who led the Chicago federal probe.
(Editing by Ben Klayman and Matthew Lewis)
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