Mental Health Association of Portland

Oregon's independent and impartial mental health advocate

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‘Alien Boy’ extended through March 7

Posted by Jenny on 2nd March 2013

POSTER ThumbnailHave you been meaning to see Alien Boy, but haven’t gotten around to it?  There’s still time — but not much!

Cinema 21 extended the showing of the James Chasse documentary “Alien Boy: The Death and Life of James Chasse,” through March 7.

This exquisitely crafted, evocative documentary will shock you, horrify you and bring you to tears as director Brian Lindstrom shows you who Jim Chasse was, and what happened to him at the hands of Portland police.

When: Saturday and Sunday: 2:30, 4:30, 7 and 9 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday: 4:30, 7, 9 p.m. Thursday (last day!): 3:45 and 6:05 p.m.

Tickets are $7 before 6 p.m., $9 after 6 p.m., $8 for students, $6 for seniors and children. Cinema 21, 616 N.W. 21st Ave.

WATCH – Alien Boy trailer

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Talk about Alien Boy on KBOO Radio

Posted by admin2 on 27th February 2013

Listen and download @ http://kboo.fm/node/54128

james chasse

Documentary film producer and Mental Health Association of Portland board member Jason Renaud speaks with KBOO radio Wednesday host Lisa Loving about the film Alien Boy: the Life and Death of James Chasse and the state of police reform in Portland, Oregon, February 27, 2013.

From KBOO: Tickets are still available for ‘Alien Boy,’ the documentary about the police killing of James Chasse now showing at Cinema 21. We are live in Studio Two with the film’s producer, Jason Renaud. Did you know James Chasse? Give us a call, 503-281-8187

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‘Alien Boy’ director on remembering James Chasse as ‘just a person’

Posted by Jenny on 26th February 2013

By Brian Lindstrom, in the Portland Tribune, Feb. 21, 2013

Brian Lindstrom

Brian Lindstrom

As parents of a 7- and an 8-year-old, my wife Cheryl Strayed and I often discuss what we hope to impart to our children.

At the top of that list is resilience, which I define not only as the ability to persevere despite obstacles but also as the capacity to extend some key element of your essential being beyond the vicissitudes and surfaces of day-to-day life.

James Chasse was resilient, and the opportunity to share that and other of his defining characteristics with a large audience was one of the main reasons for making the documentary “Alien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse.”

Many of you know Chasse’s name through the headline “Man with schizophrenia dies in police custody.” Perhaps you followed the story through the grand jury and civil lawsuit phases, and perhaps you wondered how he received 26 fractures to 16 ribs.

The first task of the film was to delve into James’ life, adding necessary dimension, depth and nuance to a person that — through no fault of his own — was now being defined by how he died. In making “Alien Boy,” I wanted to define James by how he lived.

One of the brightest parts of James’ life was his participation in Portland’s early punk music scene. Embraced by fellow outsiders and artists, he flourished, publishing his fanzine The Oregon Organizm, writing and recording songs as lead singer of The Combos, and playing muse to Greg Sage of the Wipers and Kim Kincaid of the Neo Boys, inspiring the songs “Alien Boy” and “Nothing to Fear.”

How many of us can say one song was written about us? James had two.

A measured account

James Chasse

James Chasse

The onset of schizophrenia made it nearly impossible for James to maintain those relationships, though he valiantly tried, writing a heartbreakingly brave note to an old friend from his punk days, “I thought I’d try to explain who I am….”

As so often happens with people suffering from severe and persistent mental illness, his behavior put people off and his interactions became confined to family members, mental health professionals and the rare person willing to endure the discomfort of reaching across the chasm of schizophrenia. One such brave, kind soul was Russell Sacco, a retired physician who attended the same church as James.

“He’s just a person and I’m just a person, so I went up and talked to him,” Dr. Sacco explains.

After weeks of no response, one day James replied “hello” to Dr. Sacco and a dialogue began. If only the police officers had approached James in a similar spirit that fateful day — or, absent that, ignored him altogether and not have initiated a foot pursuit that the Portland Police Bureau’s Training Division would later rule should never have happened.

The other task of the film was to take a clear-eyed, calm, measured account of how and why James Chasse died. Using eyewitness accounts, audiotape of the police investigation, police evidence photos, official court documents, footage from jail surveillance cameras, interviews of Medical Examiner Dr. Karen Gunson, recent Portland Mayor Sam Adams, then-Multnomah County Chairman Ted Wheeler, journalists Matt Davis and Anna Griffin, attorney Tom Steenson and James’ mother and father, and videotaped depositions from Officer Christopher Humphreys, Sgt. Kyle Nice and Deputy Bret Burton, the film presents a relentless, enraging cascade of actions, decisions, omissions and lies on the part of police that led to James Chasse’s death.

Then-Mayor Tom Potter and then-Police Chief Rosie Sizer attempted to divert attention from the actions of Humphreys, Nice and Burton by framing what happened to James Chasse as a failure of the mental health system.

Nothing could be further from the truth. James was a success story, living independently and managing things well. He went off his meds, which is part of the disease of mental illness, but his case manager was aware of this and asked Project Respond to do a welfare visit accompanied by a police officer.

The welfare visit revealed that James was in a bad way, and Project Respond’s Ela Howard asked Officer Worthington to file a report flagging James as mentally ill so that if the police ever encountered him again, they would know to call Project Respond rather than try to deal with James by themselves.

Officer Worthington didn’t file the report. This was on Sept. 15, 2006, two days before James died. The mental health system is not to blame for James’s tragic death.

Fueling change

Last Friday evening, at the Northwest Children’s Theater on Northwest 18th and Everett, a mere 100 feet from where Officer Humphreys first encountered James, we had a party after “Alien Boy” premiered at Cinema 21 as part of the Portland International Film Festival.

I had the privilege of introducing Mayor Charlie Hales to James Chasse Sr. What followed was an open conversation between a still grieving father and a new mayor about what steps the city can take to guard against this kind of tragedy happening again.

I’m in Missoula, Mont., where the film just played in the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival. The audience was enraged — may that rage fuel positive change.

But rage will only get us so far. Let Russell Sacco’s simple, wise words guide us: “He’s just a person, and I’m just a person….”

In that vein, we have to ask about the toll all this has taken on the officers involved. Have they received the necessary mental health help such a traumatic experience requires? How has this experience changed them? What have they learned? Are they still capable of doing their jobs? Do we, the public, still have confidence in them?

Portland resident Brian Lindstrom’s third feature-length documentary, “Alien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse,” will play Sunday through March 7 at Cinema 21 in Portland.

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‘Alien Boy’ review: The untimely end of James Chasse

Posted by Jenny on 22nd February 2013

By Jamie S. Rich, The Oregonian, Feb. 21, 2013

James Chasse as a boy.
James Chasse as a boy.

Chances are most Portlanders remember hearing about the night James Chasse died, even if they don’t remember his name or the exact circumstances.

In September 2006, Chasse died in police custody after sustaining injuries during his arrest. The 42-year-old man, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia as a teenager, was chased down and tackled by officers downtown in the Pearl District. The cops defended their use of force as being in line with department standards. Bystanders, including one who snapped pictures with his phone, had a different story to tell.

“Alien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse” is the result of six years of work by Portland filmmaker Brian Lindstrom. The documentary sets out to separate and explore the different versions of the tragic events.

Lindstrom frames the material as a clinical procedural, sifting through testimony and looking at the evidence. Though the arresting officers declined to take part, they are represented via videotaped depositions. Much of what they have to say doesn’t add up, and a lot of what we see and hear is stomach turning. Yet “Alien Boy” attempts to be fair. The judgments come from without, rather than within.

Lindstrom lets the facts shine a light on the faults within the system that allowed these civil servants to forget they were dealing with a human being and not a stereotype or statistic. In the process, the director also restores James Chasse’s identity, reminding us that he was more than a headline, but also a son and a friend.

“Alien Boy” is enraging and heartbreaking. While it answers a lot of questions about the circumstances of that terrible night, it raises many others about how we view the mentally ill in our country and, perhaps more specifically, how even a city like Portland can turn a blind eye to so much suffering. Lindstrom’s film never preaches, but it does provoke. Don’t be surprised if you leave the theater looking at the streets outside differently than when you went in.

Alien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse
Review grade: A
Cast and crew: Directed by Brian Lindstrom
Running time: 91 min.
Rated: Not rated
Playing at: Cinema 21, Sunday through Thursday
The lowdown: A provocative, heartbreaking documentary about a mentally ill Portland man who died in police custody in 2006, the film seeks to find the truth about what happened while also examining the life of the victim.

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Hales on Alien Boy: ‘It’s a Stunning Film’

Posted by Jenny on 20th February 2013

By Aaron Mesh, Willamette Week, Feb. 19, 2013

Portland Mayor Charlie Hales

Portland Mayor Charlie Hales

Barely 48 hours before the first police-involved shooting of Mayor Charlie Hales‘ term—the killing of an emergency room patient allegedly waving a gun outside Portland Adventist Medical Center on Feb. 17—the mayor sat through a crash course on what not to do.

Hales attended the Feb. 15 premiere of Alien Boy, a blistering documentary on the 2006 death of James Chasse while in Portland police custody.

Hales’ offered a glowing review of the movie as he emerged from Cinema 21 on Friday night.

“It’s a stunning film,” he told WW as he left Cinema 21. “It’s a very clear-eyed look into a tragedy. We have to have a culture where officers use the minimum force that is required. This reinforces my interest in making that real. It’s a public service, and I hope more people see it.”

Other reactions were less measured. Patrons in the balcony called out “Murderer!” and “Sociopath!” at footage of Wheeler County Sheriff Christopher Humphreys, the then-Portland cop who tackled Chasse on a Pearl District sidewalk.

In the wake of Sunday’s hospital shooting, Hales has taken a cautious approach in how he responds. He hasn’t offered a public statement yet, and the mayor’s office cancelled a scheduled press conference on a city audit of road paving.

Alien Boy opens Sunday, Feb. 24, for a two-week engagement at Cinema 21.

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Brian Lindstrom talks about documenting the life and death of James Chasse

Posted by Jenny on 19th February 2013

By Allison Frost, OPB News, Feb. 19, 2013

LISTENClick here to listen to a recording of the show: Brian Lindstrom on OPB 2-20-13

On Wednesday, Feb. 20 on “Think Out Loud,” Brian Lindstrom will be a guest.  Lindstrom is the filmmaker of the new documentary of the life and death of James Chasse, who died in police custody in 2006.

James Chasse was not a name most people knew before he died — at least most people unfamiliar with the early punk rock scene in Portland. Chasse suffered from mental illness, but filmmaker Brian Lindstrom told me that his death in police custody did not reflect a failure of the mental health system. On the contrary, Chasse was in many ways a success story — at least, before his death. Rather, Lindstrom says, the tragedy involves failures on a bigger and more disturbing scale.

How closely did you follow the case of James Chasse, his death, and the subsequent lawsuit and federal investigation that followed? What questions do you have for documentary filmmaker Brian Lindstrom about Alien Boy?  Listen tomorrow at 12:20 p.m.

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Alien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse

Posted by admin2 on 13th February 2013

The human soul behind the monster’s mask.

Film review from Willamette Week, February 12, 2013

Infuriating, tragic, heartbreaking and incendiary in equal measures, Portland filmmaker Brian Lindstrom’s Alien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse is a documentary that plays out like a horror film and leaves you absolutely breathless. The story is one familiar to any Portlander who has picked up a newspaper any time in the past seven years: Chasse, crippled by schizophrenia but by all accounts harmless, was beaten by Portland police, died in custody and was the subject of a massive cover-up that portrayed him as a monster.

WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS James Chasse

WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS James Chasse

Lindstrom’s film pieces together an impressive collection of eyewitness accounts and courtroom footage to tell the story of a case that pulled Portland police into national focus, painting a portrait of deceit that rocked our self-image as a gentle hamlet for the creative. What Lindstrom forges is an amazing piece of documentary journalism that’s equally focused on the procedural account of Chasse’s death and the people whose lives it affected. Everybody except the officers whose fists sealed Chasse’s fate offer their remembrances, though officers Kyle Nice, Bret Barton and Christopher Humphreys do appear in archival footage of their trial (each refused to be interviewed).

But what really hammers Alien Boy home is the Life part of its title. When Chasse was slain, the police falsely labeled him a transient junkie. Lindstrom’s film dives deeply into the life of a man who touched countless lives through his art and the pioneering position he held in Portland’s early punk-rock scene. Ex-girlfriends, family members, musicians, artists and parishioners from his church all tell of a deeply troubled but caring man whose mental despair robbed him of peace.

It’s this human setup that makes Alien Boy’s eventuality all the more difficult, and Humphreys’ smug apathy and on-record lies all the more infuriating. Lindstrom has taken a tragedy and emerged with an essential viewing experience. It shows that, once you look past someone’s seeming decrepitude, there’s a soul beneath that needs to be nourished so it doesn’t slip through the cracks. Chasse was starting to slip, but before he fell, his life was extinguished by those charged with protecting him. Lindstrom does a tremendous job showing what we lost as Chasse lay dying on a Pearl District sidewalk: not just a life, but our confidence in those sworn to serve and protect.

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Hear about Alien Boy on Carl in the Morning radio show, featuring Denis Theriault

Posted by Jenny on 11th February 2013

From BlogTalkRadio, Feb. 7, 2013

posterCarl’s guest on Blog Talk Radio is Denis Theriault, a reporter for The Portland Mercury, who has covered Portland police violence and its aftermath closely.  Theriault discusses Portland’s top stories, the Portland International Film Festival, and Brian Lindstrom‘s film “Alien Boy.”

“Alien Boy” is the story of James Chasse, a man who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, but was committing no crime — not even suspected of one — when Portland police decided to confront him, chase him down, and savagely beat him, kick him and Taser him until 26 of his ribs were broken — and then, instead of taking him to the emergency room, they took him to jail.  Chasse died shortly after, in custody.  To this day, no officer involved in his death has been disciplined or held accountable.

The film premieres at Cinema 21 this Friday, Feb. 15.

LISTENCarl in the Morning Blog Talk Radio

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