Mental Health Association of Portland

Oregon's independent and impartial mental health advocate

Mayor changes course, opens city pocketbook to pay for CATC

Posted by Jenny on 17th May 2013

By Maxine Bernstein, The Oregonian, May 16, 2013

Crisis Assessment and Treatment Center

Crisis Assessment and Treatment Center

Portland Mayor Charlie Hales announced Thursday that the city will not cut its share of funding for the Crisis Assessment and Treatment Center, as he had set out to do in his proposed budget.

“We are gratified that people having serious mental health issues will continue to have this vital resource,” Hales said, in a joint statement with Multnomah County Chair Jeff Cogen. “In the two years since the county and city jointly opened the CATC, the center has helped to stabilize about 1,300 people in a mental health crisis.”

Hales’ proposed cut was harshly criticized by Cogen as a short-sighted mistake.

The 16-bed secure center opened in June 2011 off Northeast Grand Avenue to considerable fanfare by city, county and state officials. They touted it as a much-needed alternative to jail and hospital emergency rooms for people suffering a mental health crisis. Portland’s City Council resolution called the investment “a very high priority.”

But nearly two years later, Hales had recommended cutting the city’s annual $634,000 share of funding for the center, based on reports from Portland police that they haven’t found it useful.

Some veteran patrol officers dedicated to crisis intervention work say they didn’t know the center existed. The Police Bureau hasn’t encouraged officers to bring people they encounter there, largely because it doesn’t allow for drop-offs.

Center managers, though, earlier this month pointed to statistics that showed while Portland police haven’t been taking people directly to the center, many of the people they encountered were ending up there for treatment anyway.

Of the 1,300 people treated since the center opened, 942 patients came from emergency departments, where police likely took them initially, county officials said. Another 358 came from community referrals through social service agencies and the county jail. Of those referrals, 82 came from Project Respond staffers, who police regularly call out to mental health emergencies.

Under an agreement signed in 2010, the city and Multnomah County each agreed to 20 percent, or $634,000, of the center’s $3.5 million operating costs. The state picks up the rest.

The mayor’s about-face came after further discussions with Cogen about the crisis center, as well talks about finding ways to fund other services, such as the needle exchange program, a one-stop domestic violence center, local senior centers and SUN schools.

“Because Multnomah County is in a stable budget position this year” Hales and Cogen said in their statement, “we agreed that the county will pick up the city’s share for the needle exchange program and one-stop domestic violence center. And the county will provide one-time-only money to maintain the current level of funding for our community’s senior centers and split the cost of three SUN schools for one year, giving both the city and county time to work on a longer-term solution for both of those vital services.”

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Mayor Charlie Hales wants to cut city dollars for mental health crisis center

Posted by Jenny on 4th May 2013

By Maxine Bernstein, The Oregonian, May 4, 2013

After her son died, Carol Slaney found help at the CATC.

After her son died, Carol Slaney found help at the CATC.

Carol Slaney woke up Jan. 31 to find her 26-year-old son dead beside her bed from an accidental drug overdose. She grabbed a .45-caliber revolver and disappeared, hiding in an abandoned house behind her Southeast Portland apartment.

“I just sat in that house, spinning the gun, planning my death,” Slaney said. “He was my world.”

Worried family members called police to check on her. As officers shined flashlights into the windows of her apartment, Slaney watched through the window of the derelict home nearby.

Slaney, who suffers from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, had been placed on mental health holds before, a self-described frequent flyer at hospital emergency rooms. She didn’t want to return there, so she remained hidden from police.

On her fourth day alone, Slaney desperately called her case manager and pleaded, “I need to go to CATC.”

Peer support counselor Ashleigh Brenton

Peer support counselor Ashleigh Brenton

“In my darkest time, they just took my hand and walked with me,” Slaney, 49, said this week, as she sat inside the Multnomah County’s Crisis and Assessment and Treatment Center. “This place is personal and genuine. CATC is probably my savior.”

The 16-bed secure center opened in June 2011 off Northeast Grand Avenue to considerable fanfare by city, county and state officials. They touted it as a much-needed alternative to jail and hospital emergency rooms for people suffering a mental health crisis. Portland’s City Council resolution called the investment “a very high priority.”

But nearly two years later, Mayor Charlie Hales has recommended cutting the city’s annual $634,000 share of funding for the center, based on reports from Portland police that they haven’t found it useful.

CATC Administrator Dan Clune

CATC Administrator Dan Clune

Some veteran patrol officers dedicated to crisis intervention work say they didn’t know the center existed. The Police Bureau hasn’t encouraged officers to bring people they encounter there, largely because it doesn’t allow for drop-offs.

“It’s a valuable service,” said Lt. Cliff Bacigalupi, who is supervising the creation of a new police crisis intervention team. “It just wasn’t a good fit for us.”

Center managers, though, point to statistics that show while Portland police aren’t taking people directly to the center, many of the people they encounter are ending up there for treatment anyway.

To date, the center has treated 1,300 people. Of those, 942 patients came from emergency departments, where police likely took them initially, county officials said. Another 358 came from community referrals through social service agencies and the county jail. Of those referrals, 82 came from Project Respond staffers, who police regularly call out to mental health emergencies.

Peer support counselor Akil Stigler

Peer support counselor Akil Stigler

“We discovered the police have been using it indirectly,” said Jeff Cogen, Multnomah County chairman. “But it doesn’t have to happen that way.”

The center, on the second floor of the David P. Hooper Sobering Center, serves adults 18 or older who live in Multnomah County and have serious mental illness. They must be indigent or have insurance coverage through Oregon Health Plan-Health Share.

The locked floor with 16 rooms resembles a wing of a hospital, yet with a lounge area decorated with patients’ artwork, an outdoor patio with picnic tables and a kitchen. It’s the only short-term crisis center of its kind in the county.

Patients stay from four to 14 days, until their symptoms stabilize. They must have a diagnosed mental illness, be referred from either a community care provider, an emergency room or acute hospital unit. They also must have stable medical vital signs on arrival. Upon discharge, they leave with a plan for follow-up treatment.

A patient room at the CATC.

A patient room at the CATC.

Mental health clinicians, psychiatrists, nurses and peer support specialists are on staff 24 hours, seven days a week.

If the Portland City Council approves the mayor’s proposed cut, the county-run center expects to reduce its beds to 11 and serve about 200 fewer people a year. The city and county had agreed in 2010 to each pay 20 percent, or $634,000, of the center’s $3.5 million operating costs. The state picks up the rest.

Police say the center simply isn’t practical for patrol officers. In a March 2012 report, they said they can’t take people straight there and that the center doesn’t accept patients who are a danger to themselves or others, combative or assaultive, high on drugs or drunk. Instead, the report said, police end up arresting people in crisis and taking them to jail or driving them to local emergency rooms.

READPolice Bureau report on CATC, March 2012

Outside patio at the CATC.

Outside patio at the CATC.

The Police Bureau’s position baffles center administrators, particularly when federal investigators have demanded Portland police improve their encounters with people suffering from mental illness.

The county also has a dedicated line for police to call when dealing with mental health emergencies and the staff can refer them to the crisis center. But police have rarely used it.

Center managers said police can request workers from the nonprofit Project Respond to assess people in the field and refer them to the center for treatment when appropriate.

Project Respond tries to use the center as much as possible, said the agency’s director, Jay Auslander. “It allows some folks to avoid going to the ER, or helps shorten their hospital visits,” he said.

Staff meeting at shift change.

Staff meeting at shift change.

Center managers estimate that it takes an average of 15 to 30 minutes to admit a person, often a far cry from the lengthy wait police find at hospital ERs.

They also dispute that the police claim that the center doesn’t treat people who are a danger to themselves or others.

“We take those folks all the time,” said Kevin McChesney, the regional director for Telecare, which contracts with the county to operate the center. In fact, he said, most patients are considered a danger to themselves or others.

Center workers just want to make sure police have disarmed the people so they’re not an immediate threat, he said.

Artwork on the wall was done by a former patient.

Artwork on the wall was done by a former patient.

“We can certainly take people police pluck off a bridge who are suicidal,” McChesney added. But he acknowledged: “We’re not so certain about the person swinging an ax.”

It appears from his discussions with police, McChesney said, that they want a drop-off treatment center that accepts people without a referral, similar to the county-sponsored Crisis Triage Center that operated at Providence Medical Center until its closure in 2003.

“It seems to me they want an all or nothing solution. There needs to be a cooperative effort with police and so far that hasn’t occurred,” he said. “I think there are additional avenues where police can use this. There really hasn’t been a great dialogue about that, and I would welcome that.”

Police Capt. Sara Westbrook said most of the people officers place on mental health holds require a higher level of security and care than the patients accepted at the center. It just isn’t a good option for police, she said.

The mayor said the city is working to seal an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice for police reforms on how to help people with mental illness.

“If it’s the county center or another resource, the bottom line is helping people who the police encounter,” Hales said by email. “… We’re actively engaged with a wide array of parties to determine the type of resources that would be of greatest practical assistance to our officers on the street.”

Slaney has been admitted to the crisis center at least five different times. She’s gotten to know the staff, many of whom had met her son, Jonathan, during his visits with her. He died from methadone and methamphetamine toxicity.

“Sometimes I get weak and fall astray and return here,” she said. “I didn’t think anyone could ever understand. I didn’t see no hope. But the staff here reminded me that I needed to honor my son’s memory. Regardless of my mental illness, you’re made to feel special here.”

Slaney recently packed up her son’s clothes and donated them to the crisis center.

“They don’t get enough credit for who they are and what they’re about,” she said. “I just knew where I was, and what they’ve done for me.”

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Jeff Cogen slams mayor’s “short-sighted” budget cuts to mental health crisis center

Posted by Jenny on 1st May 2013

County Chair Jeff Cogen

County Chair Jeff Cogen

Mayor Charlie Hales stunned Multnomah County officials Tuesday when he announced that the city would no longer pay its share of a 16-bed secure mental health treatment center that opened two years ago after the death of James P. Chasse Jr.

Portland police haven’t taken anyone to the Crisis Assessment Treatment Center despite a much-celebrated city-county agreement signed in 2011 that called for each to pay 20 percent, or $634,000, of the center’s $3.5 million operating costs. The state picks up the rest. Since the center’s opening in June 2011, 1,297 people have been treated there.

Hales said the city should fund public safety services, not public health programs.

“CATC is a mental health facility, plain and simple,” Hales said. “It’s not where police officers can drop people off.”County Chairman Jeff Cogen called the mayor’s budget recommendation “short-sighted” and a mistake. It will mean the county-run center must reduce its beds to 11 and serve about 200 fewer people a year — some of whom will undoubtedly come into contact with police on the street, he said.

The center opened in June 2011 off Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in response to the 2006 death of Chasse, 42, who was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and died in police custody.

In addition to the city and county commitment, the Portland Development Commission provided $2 million for development and the state contributed $1 million to renovate the second floor of the David P. Hooper Sobering Center for the new center.

Its staff provides patients up to 14 days of assessment and treatment and develops a treatment plan for them after they leave the center.

“Going there means they can get stabilized in a humane and cost-efficient way,” Cogen said. “The genesis of this was James Chasse’s death.”

He said he was perplexed by the mayor’s proposal, considering a recent U.S. Department of Justice investigation that found Portland police have a pattern of using excessive force against people with mental illness.

He also pointed to the city’s proposed $2.3 million settlement with a man suffering from mental illness shot by a Portland officer two years ago.

That alone is “four times the amount the city spends for this center,” Cogen said.

Portland Police Chief Mike Reese said the memorandum of understanding between the city and county on the center’s operation has “a number of barriers” that make it prohibitive for police to take people there but declined to identify them.

Capt. Sara Westbrook, tapped to lead the Police Bureau’s new Behavioral Health Unit, said the county’s center “has never been on police radar.” The open-floor plan makes it unsuitable to drop off someone in crisis and a danger to themselves, she said.

“It’s a valuable service,” said Lt. Cliff Bacigalupi, who is overseeing the creation of a new police Enhanced Crisis Intervention Team of officers. “It just wasn’t a good fit for us.”

For years, Portland police have lamented the 2003 closing of the county-sponsored Crisis Triage Center at Providence Medical Center, where officers could drop off someone they encountered during a call who needed immediate mental health care. But the triage center quickly became overrun with patients. It also provided no treatment once people left. County budget cuts closed the triage center.

Cogen said the newer Crisis Assessment Treatment Center was never intended to be a “drop-off” center.” It’s designed for people suffering a mental health crisis who might hurt themselves or others. To be admitted, a person must first undergo an assessment at a hospital, a walk-in clinic or in the field by a mental health worker, such as a Project Respond staffer.

“The police, for some reason, don’t want to go through that step. They’d like a place they can go and dump people,” Cogen said. “The idea that it doesn’t deserve city support because it’s not that, even when it was never supposed to be, is preposterous.”

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Portland Police Bureau announces members of new Behavioral Health Unit

Posted by Jenny on 1st May 2013

Portland Police Bureau news release, April 30, 2013

BHU LogoIn response to the changing landscape of police work and the requirements set forth in the City’s proposed agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice, the Portland Police Bureau has created the Behavioral Health Unit (BHU). The BHU is located within Central Precinct and encompasses and oversees the four tiers of police response to individuals with mental illness or in crisis:

  • The core competency crisis intervention training for all officers;
  • Enhanced crisis intervention training for a group of officers who volunteer to respond to most crisis calls;
  • The proactive Mobile Crisis Unit (MCU) and,
  • The Service Coordination Team (SCT).

BHU is commanded by Captain Sara Westbrook, a 27-year-veteran of law enforcement (19 with the Portland Police Bureau and eight with Thurston County and Tumwater, WA); Lieutenant Cliff Bacigalupi, a 16-year-veteran of the Portland Police Bureau; and Sergeant Robert McCormick, an 28-year-veteran of law enforcement (18 with the Portland Police Bureau and 10 with the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office).

PPB Behavioral Health Unit

PPB Behavioral Health Unit

Officer Amy Bruner-Dehnert, an 8-year-veteran, has been selected as the new Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) Coordinator. Officer Bruner-Dehnert also served 20 years in the United States Army, serving in Operation Enduring Freedom (Iraq), retiring as a Lieutenant Colonel.

Officer Bret Burton, a 9-year-veteran of law enforcement (five with the Portland Police Bureau and four with the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office), was selected to the Mobile Crisis Unit (MCU) car in July 2012, and works with Averyl Growden, a Licensed Mental Health Professional from Project Respond.

Officer Sean Christian, an 18-year-veteran of law enforcement (five with the Portland Police Bureau and 13 with the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office), was selected to the Mobile Crisis Unit in March 2013, and works with Dinah Brooks, a licensed Mental Health Professional from Project Respond.

Officer Josh Silverman, a 3-year-veteran of the Portland Police Bureau, was selected to the Mobile Crisis Unit in March 2013, and works with Cindy Hackett. Cindy has been working with the Police Bureau as a Mobile Crisis Unit clinician since 2010.

The Mobile Crisis Unit will continue to proactively work with individuals who have multiple contacts with police to attempt to connect them with appropriate services in advance of a mental health crisis.

Although all Portland Police Bureau officers will continue to receive crisis intervention training throughout their careers, 50 officers from a variety of patrol assignments have been selected as Enhanced Crisis Intervention Team officers. These Officers will be the first responders dispatched by 9-1-1 to calls that are determined to be related to an individual in a mental heath crisis. BHU command staff conducted internal background checks on each officer to include complaints, Employee Information Systems (EIS) review, Use of Force review, and immediate supervisor input.

Training for the new CIT officers will begin in May with two sessions and will include: indicators of mental illness; crisis communication skills; interaction with consumers and family members; and education on community resources. The training will include scenarios applying patrol tactics to persons in behavior crisis.

Also under the auspices of the BHU, is the Service Coordination Team (SCT), a program that offers treatment to the City’s most frequent drug and property crime offenders to address their drug and alcohol addictions, mental health issues and criminality. This program has successfully graduated 102 former drug addicts from its treatment program, reducing recidivism among program graduates by 91%.

Officer James Crooker, an 11-year-veteran of law enforcement, has been selected to work in the unit. Officer Crooker has been a Portland Police officer for four years. Prior to that he was a police officer in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and also served in the United States Marine Corps (Staff Sergeant) for 13 years, deploying to Iraq for Operation Enduring Freedom II.

These are some of the initial changes that the Portland Police Bureau is undertaking to respond to the evolving context in which police officers find themselves. The Portland Police Bureau is committed to continuous improvement in our delivery of service to Portland’s most vulnerable communities.

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What Happened to Merle Hatch

Posted by Jenny on 18th February 2013

130218-Portland-Adventist-Shooting-660

Officer-involved shooting takes man’s life at Adventist Medical Center

By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News, Feb. 18, 2013

An “officer-involved shooting investigation” has been launched after a suspected gunman’s death at a Portland, Ore., hospital.

Officers were called to the Adventist Medical Center in south-east Portland  at 9:30 p.m. Sunday local time (0:30 a.m. ET Monday) following reports of a man with a gun on the hospital’s grounds, city police spokesman Pete Simpson said in a statement.

Police encountered the suspect as they locked-down the hospital and its campus, according to Simpson.

“Shots were fired and the suspect is deceased,” the statement said. “Portland Police are now in the very early stages of an officer-involved shooting investigation.”

Judy Leach, spokeswoman for the Adventist Medical Center, said the hospital “issued a code silver as a result of a combative person on the premises.”

She added: “There were no injuries to any patients or staff. The suspect is officially deceased. Portland Police continue to investigate the incident.

“The health, security, and safety of our patients, physicians, and staff is our number one priority. The policy put into place worked. Counselors and chaplains are on hand for anyone requiring services.”


Update on Officer-Involved Shooting at Portland Adventist Medical Center

Portland Police Bureau press release, Feb. 18, 2013

The Portland Police Bureau is continuing to investigate the circumstances surrounding the officer-involved shooting on Sunday evening in the parking lot of Portland Adventist Medical Center (PAMC), located at 10123 Southeast Market Street.

On Sunday February 17, 2013, at 9:24 p.m., Portland Police officers assigned to East Precinct responded to PAMC on the report of someone in the courtyard armed with a black handgun. As multiple officers were enroute, additional information was broadcast that the suspect was a patient and was currently in the employee parking lot. Additionally, information was given to 9-1-1 dispatchers that the suspect pointed a gun at a PAMC Security vehicle.

As officers and sergeants began arriving in the area, they immediately began to develop a plan to safely address the situation. Officers requested that PAMC go into lock-down and a Sergeant requested that Project Respond and Portland Police Air Support be called out to the scene. Additionally, a K-9 Unit and Medical Personnel were asked to respond.

Officers encountered the suspect in the PAMC employee parking lot and began giving him commands. During the course of the encounter, three officers fired shots at the suspect, who fell to the ground. Officers immediately approached the downed suspect with a ballistic shield and rendered medical aid. Medical personnel checked the suspect and confirmed he was deceased.

An autopsy is scheduled for Tuesday morning by the Oregon State Medical Examiner. The suspect’s name will be released after he has been identified and family notifications have been done.

The three involved Bureau members are all assigned to East Precinct afternoon shift: Sergeant Nathan Voeller a 12-year-veteran; Officer Andrew Hearst, a 3-year-veteran; and Officer Royce Curtiss, a 7-year-veteran.

As is standard procedure, all three involved members will remain on paid administrative leave pending the ongoing investigation and are scheduled to be interviewed on Wednesday February 20, 2013.

To protect the integrity of this ongoing officer-involved shooting investigation, no additional details on this case will be released until sometime late Wednesday.

Once the investigation is complete, the entire case will be presented to the District Attorney’s Office who will schedule a Grand Jury.

Representatives from the Chief’s Office, Mayor’s Office, Office of Professional Standards, Office of Independent Police Review (IPR), and the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office were at the scene on Sunday night and have been briefed on the status of the investigation.


Portland AdventistMan shot and killed by police at Portland Adventist Medical Center was an emergency room patient

A man shot and killed by Portland police Sunday night was an emergency room patient at Portland Adventist Medical Center, a hospital spokeswoman said.”He came into the emergency department and then left the emergency department,” said Judy Leach, director of marketing and communication for the hospital.Police spokesman Sgt. Pete Simpson said the dead man’s identity remains unknown. An autopsy is planned by the Multnomah County Medical Examiner on Tuesday.”We don’t know who he is, but maybe the M.E. can work their magic and help us find out,” Simpson.Three officers from the Portland Police Bureau’s East Precinct, who all fired shots during the incident, were placed on paid administrative leave while the shooting is under investigation.

Simpson said officers were called to the employee parking lot at 9:24 p.m. on the report of a man in the hospital’s courtyard armed with a black handgun. As officers sped to the scene, dispatchers told officers that callers to 9-1-1 now said the man was patient at the hospital and that he had pointed the gun at a medical center security guard’s vehicle.

Simpson said officers and supervisors developed a plan to safely handle the situation, telling hospital staff to lock-down the building.

They also activated Project Respond member, which parks an officer with a mental health expert. The program provides 24-hour, 7-day-a-week coverage to help officers deal with people who are in mental health crisis.

Officers also called for the bureau’s air support unit, a K-9 unit and paramedics to respond to the scene.

During the encounter with the man, officers gave him several commands. All three officers then fired at the man, who fell to the ground.

The officers approached the man from behind ballistic shields and rendered first aid; paramedics pronounced the man dead at the scene.


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The three officers involved in the shooting were identified as Sergeant Nathan Voeller a 12-year-veteran; Officer Andrew Hearst, a 3-year-veteran; and Officer Royce Curtiss, a 7-year-veteran.

Leach said the hospital activated an emergency plan known as “code silver,” which means there is an armed, combative subject on hospital grounds.

“We practice these scenarios all the time,” Leach said.

This is the first fatal shooting of a suspect since the Justice Department found in September that Portland police engage in a pattern of excessive force against people who suffer from or appear to suffer from mental illness, and the first fatal officer-involved shooting since Mayor Charlie Hales took office.

Simpson said Hales visited the shooting scene overnight, and received a briefing on the incident by Chief Mike Reese Monday morning.

Simpson said once the investigation is finished, details of Sunday’s shooting will be presented to the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office and reviewed by a grand jury.

The last fatal officer involved shooting by Portland police occurred on July 28, 2012. Billy Wayne Simms, 28, was shot six times and killed by Portland police in the parking lot of a 7-Eleven at 6840 N. Fessenden St. Officer Justin Clary told a grand jury he fired his AR-15 rifle through the passenger window of Simms’ car after he thought Simms was reaching for a gun in the car’s center console.

A .22-caliber handgun was found tucked into his waistband, near his right rear hip. A grand jury found no criminal wrongdoing by police.

The last officer-involved shooting occurred on September 29. A Multnomah County grand jury also found no criminal wrongdoing by two Portland police officers who shot and wounded Joshua Stephen Baker.

Baker, 27,  was charged with attempted murder with a firearm, first-degree assault with a firearm, felony elude, fourth-degree assault involving domestic violence and two counts of menacing.

The incident stemmed from a domestic violence assault at the Hathaway Apartments on Southeast 134th Avenue. A Good Samaritan had tried to intervene, but was allegedly shot by Baker.


Identity released of man shot by police at Adventist hospital

By KGW Staff and Associated Press, Feb. 18, 2013

The man shot and killed by officers responding to reports of an armed gunman at Portland Adventist hospital has been identfied as Merle M. Hatch, 50.

Officers responded Sunday evening about 9:30 to the Southeast Portland hospital after the initial report of a man with a gun in the courtyard, according to police bureau spokesman Sgt. Pete Simpson.

As officers were on the way, they learned the suspect was a patient.

The patient told a staff member that he had a gun and would use it on the employee, before demanding the employee lead him to the exit, a hospital spokesperson later said.

The hospital initiated what’s called a “Code Silver,” which means a staff member has seen an armed, combative person on premises, said hospital spokeswoman Judy Leach.

The suspect left alone, and hospital security saw him outside on hospital grounds.

The suspect was in the employee parking lot, and had pointed the gun at a security guard’s vehicle, Simpson said. Officers “encountered the suspect in the PAMC employee parking lot and began giving him commands.”

Three officers fired shots at the suspect, who fell to the ground, according to a police report.

Officers administered first aid and called for medics. The man was later pronounced dead. An autopsy was scheduled for Tuesday morning.

The three involved officers are all assigned to the East Precinct: Sergeant Nathan Voeller a 12-year-veteran; Officer Andrew Hearst, a 3-year-veteran; and Officer Royce Curtiss, a 7-year-veteran.

A witness told KGW he heard nine shots fired.

“We appreciate the vigilance of individuals who helped keep this a safe community,” Leach said.


Man shot dead at Portland Adventist Medical Center was federal escapee

Portland Adventist Medical Center

Portland Adventist Medical Center

By Bryan Denson, The Oregonian, Feb. 19, 2013

The man fatally shot by Portland police was identified Tuesday as 50-year-old Merle M. Hatch, a long-time convict who was supposed to turn himself into a Colorado pre-release center but failed to report.An autopsy is scheduled this morning for Hatch, who was released from the medium-security federal prison in Sheridan on Feb. 12 with orders to report that evening to the Independence House-South Federal Center, in Colorado.

The U.S. Bureau of Prisons listed Hatch as an escapee at 9:01 p.m. that day.

Hatch checked into the emergency room Sunday evening at Portland Adventist Medical Center, then threatened a hospital employee with a gun, authorities said Monday.

He walked out abruptly and pointed the gun at a security car in an employee parking lot, police said. He was shot soon after emergency responders arrived.

Mary Hatch, Merle Hatch’s mother, said she hadn’t seen her son in two decades. She said Hatch lived in Colorado. She didn’t know how he ended up in Portland.

“He was troubled,” said Hatch, who lives in Iowa. “He was in and out of prison most of his adult life. He got into drugs early. There wasn’t much left of the person we knew as a kid growing up.”

She said her husband last saw their son 15 or 20 years ago and that he looked like he’d fallen on hard times. Public records show Hatch had an extensive criminal history, including arrests for drug-related crimes and a 2004 conviction in U.S. District Court in Colorado for bank robbery.

She said her son never married, had no children and no employment. She said he regularly got into trouble with the law. He stole to pay for drugs, she said. “Boy, does that ruin more people than we can even shake a stick at,” she said.

While serving a 10-year stretch for bank robbery at the U.S. Penitentiary in Florence, Colo., in July 2009, Hatch wrote a polite note to the judge who sentenced him in hopes of correcting the record on his criminal history.

“Your Honor, Good day and God bless,” he began. “I was convicted of bank robbery in your court 5 years ago. I received 10  1/2 years. At that time the court used a prior felony against me and counted it as violent.”

The prior violent crime wrongly tacked on time to his sentence, Hatch wrote, because the court believed he had robbed an occupied dwelling.

“But the condominium was not occupied,” he wrote. “It was vacant and up for sale at the time of the offense . . . thereby making it a non-violent crime. I would like to ask if you would reconsider my sentence in light of this. Thank you for your time. Merle Hatch.”

No action appears to have been taken on Hatch’s request, based on available records.


Man killed by police at Portland hospital was an escaped federal prisoner

Merle Hatch

Merle Hatch

A man who was shot and killed by police officers in a Portland hospital parking lot Sunday night was considered an escaped prisoner after failing to report to a federal halfway house in Colorado last week.

According to court documents obtained by KOIN, on Feb. 12, 50-year-old Merle Hatch was supposed to report to the Independence House-South Federal Center in Denver after being temporarily released from the Federal Correctional Institution in Sheridan, Ore.

Hatch failed to report to the halfway house, and at 9 p.m. on Feb. 12, his status was changed to escaped, according to a letter sent Feb. 13 from Marion Feather, warden for FCI Sheridan, to U.S. District Court Judge Marcia S. Krieger.

Hatch was serving time for a federal conviction in 2004 for bank robbery out of Colorado. He was sentenced in January 2005 by Judge Krieger to 125 months in prison and three years of post-prison supervision.

According to Paul Thompson, satellite operations administrator with FCI Sheridan, Hatch was given a commercial airline ticket and an itinerary. He was not accompanied on the trip. Thompson did not confirm what prompted Hatch’s transfer to the halfway house.

Merle Hatch’s father, Robert Hatch, described his son as troubled.  Robert Hatch, who lives in Iowa, told KOIN by phone early Tuesday morning that the Multnomah County Medical Examiner notified him and his wife that their son had been killed.

“We hadn’t seen him in 15 to 20 years,” Hatch said.

Hatch said homicide detectives with the Portland Police Bureau have not provided the family with any details about what occurred Sunday night.

Portland police responded to Adventist Medical Center after a man reportedly threatened an employee and claimed to be carrying a handgun. Officers found the suspect in a parking lot. At some point, after yelling commands, three officers shot him dead. The involved officers, identified as Sgt. Nathan Voeller, Officer Andrew Hearst and Officer Royce Curtiss, are on paid administrative leave.

Officials confirmed that Hatch checked into the hospital as an emergency room patient. The details of his visit were not released because of privacy laws.

Hatch said his son continuously go into trouble as a child and adult.

“I think that would be a fair way to put it,” Hatch said.

The family struggled at times because Merle Hatch started using drugs.

“He’d use just about any kind of drug,” Hatch said.

Hatch said he did not know why his son would have checked himself into the hospital. He said the last time he and his wife saw their son was 15-years-ago in Colorado. Robert Hatch said his son was not married and did not have any children. He described his upbringing as typical.

“He played football,” Hatch said. “He grew up here in Iowa.”

The medical examiner will perform an autopsy on Hatch’s body sometime Tuesday.

Portland Police said homicide detectives will continue to investigate the circumstances involved with the shooting. Once their investigation is complete, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office will present the case to a grand jury.


Merle Hatch goaded Portland police, raced toward officers before they shot him

By Maxine Bernstein, The Oregonian, Feb. 21, 2013

Police said they believed Merle Hatch had a gun.  It was actually a phone receiver.

Police said they believed Merle Hatch had a gun. It was actually a phone receiver.

Merle M. Hatch taunted police, telling them to “Come on, play,” after they rushed to Portland Adventist Medical Center on reports of a man threatening staff and security guards with a gun.

In the darkened employee parking lot Sunday night, Hatch can be heard on a cellphone video yelling: “Close as you gonna get? That ain’t close enough, come on.”

Hatch shouted that he “ain’t gonna draw” and goaded the officers with obscenities to “come from behind you all, do something” and “One a ya, anyone a ya. I can’t see ya anyway.”

When an East Precinct sergeant and two officers — huddled about 80 yards away in the driveway outside the emergency room — didn’t react, Hatch yelled: “I’m coming to you then, pig. Let’s go! Let’s go!”

Hatch ran toward them. Police shouted “Stop” and “Hands up!” Hatch responded: “One! Two! Three!”

When he got within 14 yards of them, the sergeant and officers each fired multiple rounds, killing Hatch. He fell on his back.

WATCH – press conference on Merle Hatch’s death

Police on Wednesday released the video taken by a resident who was leaning out his window across the street from the hospital and confirmed that Hatch didn’t have a gun.

After the shooting, officers found half of a black telephone handle a few inches from Hatch’s right hand that they believe he used to simulate a handgun.

In the minutes leading up to the shooting, officers can be heard on police dispatch audio alerting their colleagues emphatically several times that the suspect had a gun.

LISTEN - 911 dispatch tape

“He does have a gun, probably in the right hand,” one officer radioed. Just before the shooting, an officer radioed, “He’s got the gun in his hand.” Even after Hatch went down, an officer radioed: “Shots fired, Code 3 medical. He’s still got the gun in his hand.”

Hatch, 50, had stolen the plastic phone handle from the hospital’s emergency room earlier that night, police said. They say he used it to simulate a gun when he threatened a female security guard inside the hospital and then pointed it at a security vehicle in the parking lot.

The shooting occurred at 9:36 p.m., just 12 minutes after police were called to the parking lot and before other help that police had summoned could get there.

“I think it’s safe to say everyone thought it was a gun they were looking at,” Assistant Chief Donna Henderson said.

The case will now go to a Multnomah County grand jury for review during the first full week of March, said Don Rees, a chief deputy district attorney. The grand jury testimony likely will be recorded, with a transcript made public.

Chief Mike Reese said the officers “intentionally kept their distance,” but the encounter unfolded quickly. On the way to the call, a police sergeant had asked for a mental health crisis worker, a police dog and a police plane to respond, “but there was no time for these resources to arrive,” Reese said.

Police declined to say how many gunshots were fired, but at least eight are heard on the video. They withheld information that Hatch didn’t have a gun until Wednesday “basically for the integrity of the investigation,” Henderson said.

Nathan Voeller, the East Precinct afternoon shift sergeant, and Officers Andrew Hearst and Royce Curtiss each fired shots. They were interviewed by police detectives Wednesday morning, more than 48 hours after the shooting. Voeller, 34, has been with the bureau for 12 years, Curtiss, 31, for seven years and Hearst, 25, for three years.

Voeller was involved in the fatal police shooting of unarmed fugitive David E. Hughes in November 2006. He fired seven rounds from an AR-15 rifle. Two other officers also fired their handguns.

Voeller also worked as one of the Police Bureau’s lead defensive tactics instructors before his recent promotion to sergeant. In February 2012, he was among police trainers who was set to testify in support of Officer Ron Frashour in federal court. Frashour shot an unarmed man in the back in 2010. Voeller noted that Portland officers are trained that they don’t need to see a gun before using lethal force if they believe a suspect poses an immediate risk of death or serious injury.

Two years ago, Hearst was among the officers who responded to the same hospital after a man had suffered a heart attack and crashed his car in the hospital’s lot. Hearst had tried to summon medical help from the ER, only to be told to call 9-1-1.

Police did not say why Hatch had gone to the hospital’s emergency room. Police didn’t know until later that Hatch had an extensive criminal history, including arrests for drug-related crimes and a 2004 conviction in U.S. District Court in Colorado for bank robbery.

At the time Hatch was shot, he was considered a federal prison escapee for failing to report the night of Feb. 12 to a halfway house in Colorado after his release from federal prison in Sheridan that same day on a bank robbery conviction. He was supposed to board a plane bound for Denver.

Police have since tied him to a robbery of a Wells Fargo bank in Clackamas last Friday and the robbery of the Albina Community Bank off Northeast Sandy Boulevard last Wednesday.


Autopsy says Merle Hatch, killed by police after threats, died of multiple gunshot wounds

Federal fugitive Merle M. Hatch died of multiple gunshot wounds after three police officers fired at him Sunday night outside Portland Adventist Medical Center, according to autopsy results released Tuesday.Hatch was a career criminal with arrests in California, Arizona and Colorado on various charges, including burglary, bank robbery, theft and homicide, Portland police said.He had been released from the federal prison in Sheridan on Feb. 12 with orders to report that evening to the Independence House-South Federal Center, a pre-release facility in Colorado.

Hatch was driven from Sheridan by car that day with a ticket and an understanding that he would get on a plane bound for Denver, according to the U.S. Marshals Service in Portland.

But he didn’t arrive in Colorado as scheduled and the U.S. Bureau of Prisons listed Hatch as an escapee at 9:01 p.m. that evening.

On Sunday evening, Hatch checked into the emergency room at Portland Adventist Medical Center, 10123 S.E. Market St., then threatened a hospital employee, saying he had a gun, authorities said.

He then walked out and allegedly pointed a gun at a security car in an employee parking lot, police said. Police responded to a 9-1-1 call at 9:24 p.m. and some of the officers found Hatch and began giving him commands. A short time later, they shot him.

Asked Tuesday if a gun was recovered from Hatch at the scene of the shooting, police spokesman Sgt. Pete Simpson would say only that the bureau would release additional details late Wednesday “after all the interviews are complete.”Mary Hatch, Merle Hatch’s mother, said she hadn’t seen her son in two decades. She said Hatch lived in Colorado. She didn’t know how he ended up in Portland.

“He was troubled,” said Hatch, who lives in Iowa. “He was in and out of prison most of his adult life. He got into drugs early. There wasn’t much left of the person we knew as a kid growing up.”

She said her husband last saw their son 15 or 20 years ago and that he looked like he’d fallen on hard times. Public records show Hatch had an extensive criminal history, including arrests for drug-related crimes and a 2004 conviction in U.S. District Court in Colorado for bank robbery.

She said that to her knowledge, her son never married, had no children and no employment. She said he regularly got into trouble with the law. He stole to pay for drugs, she said. “Boy, does that ruin more people than we can even shake a stick at,” she said.

While serving a 10-year stretch for bank robbery at the U.S. Penitentiary in Florence, Colo., in July 2009, Hatch wrote a polite note to the judge who sentenced him in hopes of correcting the record on his criminal history.

“Your Honor, Good day and God bless,” he began. “I was convicted of bank robbery in your court 5 years ago. I received 10 1/2 years. At that time the court used a prior felony against me and counted it as violent.”

The earlier crime wrongly tacked on time to his sentence, Hatch wrote, because the court believed he had robbed an occupied dwelling.

“But the condominium was not occupied,” he wrote. “It was vacant and up for sale at the time of the offense . . . thereby making it a non-violent crime. I would like to ask if you would reconsider my sentence in light of this. Thank you for your time. Merle Hatch.”

No action appears to have been taken on Hatch’s request, based on available records.


Portland police shooting: Grand jury transcripts released in case of fugitive Merle Hatch

From the Oregonian, March 20, 2013

The Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office just released the transcripts from a grand jury review of the Feb. 17 Portland police fatal shooting of Merle M. Hatch, 50, outside Portland Adventist Medical Center.

Read the transcripts:
Merle Hatch Grand Jury testimony #1 PDF
Merle Hatch Grand Jury testimony #2 PDF
Merle Hatch Grand Jury testimony #3 – Redacted version PDF

The grand jury in the Hatch case found no criminal wrongdoing by a sergeant and two officers who shot and killed. Police had been called to the hospital on reports of a man threatening staff and security with a gun.

East Precinct Sgt. Nathan Voeller and Officers Andrew Hearst and Royce Curtiss found Hatch in a darkened hospital employee parking lot. A cellphone video recorded by a witness and released by police shows Hatch taunting police.

“Close as you gonna get? That ain’t close enough, come on,” Hatch is heard yelling. When the sergeant and officers — huddled about 80 yards away in the driveway outside the emergency room — didn’t react, Hatch yelled: “I’m coming to you then, pig. Let’s go! Let’s go!”

Hatch ran toward the officers. Police shouted “Stop!” and “Hands up!” and fired multiple rounds at Hatch when he was 42 feet from them, police said. Police found half of a black telephone handle beside Hatch’s right hand that they believe he had stolen from the hospital and used to simulate a gun.

Police haven’t said why Hatch had gone to the hospital’s emergency room. At the time he was shot, Hatch was considered a federal prison escapee for failing to report the night of Feb. 12 to a halfway house in Colorado after his release from federal prison in Sheridan that same day on a bank robbery conviction. He was supposed to board a plane for Denver.


Merle Hatch, killed by Portland police, was in mental health wing at Portland Adventist

By Helen Jung, The Oregonian, March 21, 2013

Merle M. Hatch came to Portland Adventist Medical Center on Feb. 17 convinced that two people were out to kill him. But he didn’t appear to have a medical complaint.

Instead, the 50-year-old seemed paranoid, focused on his alleged pursuers and at one point said, “Tonight is not a bad night to die.”

That’s according to Richard Butler, a security guard who sat with Hatch for about an hour as he waited for a doctor in a wing for mental health patients.

Butler was one of 18 witnesses to testify before a Multnomah County grand jury about the shooting. The grand jury cleared Sgt. Nathan Voeller and Officers Andrew Hearst and Royce Curtiss of criminal wrongdoing in the fatal shooting of Hatch outside the Southeast Portland hospital.

On Wednesday, prosecutors released transcripts of the grand jury testimony, revealing new details of what happened.

Hatch had voluntarily come to the hospital earlier that Sunday evening, under the name Daniel Fox, according to Butler and another security officer, Carol Graff.

He told a nurse that he had used methamphetamine about three days earlier, Butler recalled. State medical examiner Karen Gunson also noted scratches on Hatch’s arms that are common among those who use meth or cocaine.

Around 9:20 p.m. he came out of his room, said Graff, who was watching him. She offered to get a nurse or a doctor for him, but he told her that he was going to leave and she was going to go with him, Graff testified.

Hatch told her he had a gun, threatened to shoot her if she didn’t do as he said, and lifted his shirt where she saw something black tucked into his waistband. The item was later found to be a broken telephone handset.

He had Graff walk with him out of the secured mental health wing to the ER waiting room as she mouthed “help” to staff.

Hatch then ran out of the doors of the emergency room, she said, and she radioed for help alerting others to the “code silver” indicating there was an armed patient.

Two students from the neighboring nursing school campus noted that Hatch was acting strangely as he walked around the parking lot outside the hospital. Butler, who was driving in the parking lot, came across Hatch. Hatch appeared to point a weapon at him.

As police officers arrived, Hatch started making a lot of noise, Sgt. Voeller testified.

Seeing the man in the darkened parking lot, about 70 yards away, Voeller recalled that Hatch looked “almost like a gorilla in a cage pacing back and forth, trying to make himself look kind of big.”

At one point, Voeller said, Hatch appeared to point a gun at the officers. But Hatch was still a fair distance away, Voeller said, adding that he hoped to de-escalate the situation.

Officers ordered the hospital locked down and made their way into the fenced parking lot where Hatch was, Voeller said.

But they missed an opportunity to use a beanbag shotgun when Hatch was briefly within 25 yards, Voeller said. A canine unit hadn’t yet arrived on scene, Voeller said.

He saw Hatch sit down on the roof of an SUV in the parking lot and hoped he was losing steam, Voeller said. If Hatch calmed down enough, it could allow a mental health counselor to make contact, he said.

But Voeller saw Hatch jump down from the SUV. Hatch yelled more taunts at the officers, at one point shouting: “I’m coming to you then, pig. Let’s go! Let’s go!”

Hatch headed toward Voeller and the other officers, the sergeant testified, closing in from about 70 yards away. Hatch quickened his step, first to a jog and then sprinting from about 30 yards away with what appeared to be a gun aimed at them, Voeller said.

Despite a police officer’s calls to stop and “Hands up,” Hatch yelled: “One. Two. Three” according to smartphone video taken by a witness.

Voeller interpreted the counting as “an ultimatum…He’s going to kill us.”

Seconds later, Voeller and the two officers fired 19 rounds at Hatch. Six shots struck him and two were fatal, with one hitting his right chest and the other piercing his liver, gallbladder and left kidney.

At the time he was shot, Hatch was considered a federal prison escapee for failing to report the night of Feb. 12 to a halfway house in Colorado after his release from federal prison in Sheridan that same day on a bank robbery conviction. He was supposed to board a plane bound for Denver.

Hatch was also identified as a suspect in two bank robberies between the time he was release and when he was shot. Authorities say he robbed an Albina Community Bank along Northeast Sandy Boulevard on Feb. 13, and a Wells Fargo bank in Clackamas on Feb. 15.


Portland Police Bureau releases files in Merle Hatch shooting

PORTLAND POLICE BUREAU NEWS RELEASE – March 25, 2013

Police Reports Released on Officer-Involved Shooting at Portland Adventist Medical Center

The Portland Police Bureau is releasing all the investigative reports associated with the officer-involved shooting that occurred on February 17, 2013, involving Merle Mikal Hatch, following the conclusion of the recent Grand Jury on this case.

READMerle Hatch reports released by PPB (PDF, 20MB)

LISTENMerle Hatch 911 audio.mp3

WATCH – witness cell phone video:

The files can also be found at: https://www.portlandoregon.gov/police/61944

As with all officer-involved shootings, the review will continue through the Bureau’s Use of Force Review Board which reviews policies and training in regard to this shooting.

###PPB###

 

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Officers describe difficulties in day-to-day crisis response

Posted by Jenny on 12th December 2012

By Andrea Damewood, Willamette Week, Dec. 12, 2012

Officer Casey Hettman

Officer Casey Hettman

It’s an otherwise slow Monday night, but Officer Casey Hettman is tense. He and two other Portland police officers move through a dingy hallway and flank the locked apartment door.

Behind the door is an agitated man who believes President Obama is ordering him to kill.

The cops have been summoned to the Helen M Swindells Apartments in Old Town by the man’s county social worker, who believes he’s become a risk to himself or others.

The social worker tells the cop the man inside suffers from mental illness. He wants cops to put the man on a mental-health hold and deliver him to a hospital for observation.

Oh, and one thing, the social worker says: He likes to fight cops.

The social worker knocks. The officers brace themselves. Nothing.

Hettman is thinking, What’s this guy doing? Maybe this guy is getting something to hurt us?

“It’s not until that door opens,” Hettman says later, “and you can see their hands, see their face.”

Hettman and the other officers are about to enter what are often the most critical moments between police and those in a mental-health crisis: the first 30 seconds of contact.

That’s when officers have to spot the warning signs of someone who may have lost touch with reality—the person’s motion, tone, level of aggression—and decide whether the threat to their own safety outweighs the needs of the person they’re supposed to be helping.

In the past, the choices a few Portland police officers have made in these pivotal few seconds prompted a U.S. Department of Justice investigation and a finding in September that cops have a “pattern and practice” of using excessive force against people with mental illness.

Portland quickly reached a settlement with the DOJ and scrambled to find $5.3 million to beef up social services, create a triage center, and expand units of officers trained to deal with the mentally ill.

Mayor-elect Charlie Hales and Police Chief Mike Reese (whom Hales plans to keep on the job) say they will also demand better investigation when cops do use their fists, baton, pepper spray, Taser or gun.

Beneath this tone of compliance runs an undercurrent of resistance and resentment. Reese, while talking about being a reformer, had earlier signaled he disagreed with the DOJ’s findings. And the Portland Police Association, the city’s police union, says the DOJ settlement threatens the safety of front-line officers.

And it’s simply hard to buck the decades-long attitude of police, says Mike Stafford, a former training coordinator at the state’s police academy. Stafford says police are trained to protect themselves first and face the consequences for their actions later.

“A common saying is, ‘It’s better to be judged by 12 than carried by six,’” he says.

Missing in this debate have been the voices of the officers themselves.

Over the past several weeks, WW has ridden with officers on patrol, watched how they deal with people with mental illness, and talked to them at length about what the proposed changes will mean.

Some say a fundamental cultural shift in the bureau’s attitudes about the use of force is inevitable. But many others echo the union’s view that the DOJ settlement means greater risk to officers.

“The DOJ appears to be willing to sacrifice police lives,” Officer Kevin Macho, who patrols the East Precinct, tells WW. “A Portland officer, I believe, is going to get killed because of hesitation.”

In fact, all the plans and money that will be spent may overshadow a central truth: Some officers are simply more adept and flexible than others in their approach to people with mental illness. They’re the ones less willing to default to using force. In other words, they get the problem.

The question facing the city is whether the new DOJ-imposed strategy will keep officers who don’t get it away from those with mental illness.

Officer Brad Yakots

Officer Brad Yakots

The door of the apartment in the Swindells opens, and Hettman and his partner, Brad Yakots, see why it took so long for the man inside to respond: He’s using a walker.

The cops loosen their tight shoulders a little. They tell him they are taking him for a mental-health hold, and it requires putting him in handcuffs. “Can I have a cigarette first?” the man asks.

Yakots says sure. Hettman and the third officer, James Escobar, guide the cuffed man down the hall. It’s a slow shuffle, and the man’s pants slide down his hips. He complains, so Yakots—28, with a runner’s build and close-cropped red hair—hikes them back up for him. They put the man in a patrol car. He never gets his smoke.

Later that day, the officers say most incidents with people suffering from mental illness go without incident.

“This guy has a walker and is probably not much of a threat,” says Hettman, 31, who is tall and still lives up to his college nickname of “Skinny.”

“But what if he has a gun or a knife and wants to kill me? We’re constantly having to make split-second decisions.”

With Oregon’s broken mental-health system, Portland’s police are often de facto front-line social workers. Police estimate they come into contact with 1234s (their dispatch code for person in crisis) more than 34,000 times a year, although they lack a good way to track such calls.

The DOJ settlement calls for reinstituting a team of officers whose first duty is to deal with the mentally ill.

Portland gives all officers crisis intervention training, or CIT. But the voluntary CIT team is supposed to put the best-trained cops between the mentally ill and typical beat officers, and it may include Yakots and Hettman.

The two have been partners for 2½ years—a rarity, given that most patrol officers work alone. In that time, they’ve made 921 arrests and used force 12 times.

Their number of arrests is high by department standards. But their use of force is low—just over 1 percent. Overall, Portland officers used force in 3.86 percent of arrests in 2011.

“Your tongue is the biggest tool in dealing with people in crisis,” Yakots says as the car drives near Central Precinct. “Casey and I have different strengths, and we deal well with people who aren’t playing with a full deck that day.”

That’s part of the reason Yakots and Hettman signed up for the latest version of a crisis intervention team.

Details of how large the CIT squad will be, and how much more training its members will get are still being worked out, Reese says. But the team will surely get far more than the 40 hours of standard mental-health training every line officer gets each year.

The Police Bureau declined to give WW a list of officers who applied for the CIT squad, but it says 56 cops, or about 15 percent of the department’s 365 patrol officers, signed up.

Portland had the state’s first CIT program, from 1995 to 2006. A small band of officers who had volunteered handled as many crisis cases as possible. The unit had some success, but high-profile deaths still occurred when no officer from the CIT team was on the scene or available.

James Chasse

James Chasse

That includes Jose Mejia Poot, a day laborer who was on a mental-health hold when an officer gunned him down inside the BHC-Pacific Gateway Hospital in Sellwood in 2001. CIT officers had already calmed Poot earlier that day, but hospital staff called when Poot got out of a secured area. Poot, who could not speak English, tore off a strip of an aluminum door frame and threatened staff. CIT cops weren’t available a second time, and the two officers who showed up shot him dead.

CIT officers also weren’t on hand for the death of James Chasse in 2006. Chasse was a mentally ill man police chased and knocked down in the Pearl District, believing he had urinated in the street. An autopsy showed he had 26 broken bones, including 16 of his ribs, some of which punctured a lung. The city later paid Chasse’s family $1.6 million to settle a wrongful death case.

In response, then-Mayor Tom Potter required all officers to get 40 hours of annual crisis intervention training—but then did away with a dedicated CIT team.

Chris Bouneff, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness in Oregon, says the DOJ’s demand that Portland reinstate the CIT team is a positive sign.

Having officers with advanced mental-health training will help, he says, but it will require one important thing: that the CIT squad is big enough to respond whenever needed.

“There are officers who just don’t think it’s necessary,” Bouneff says. “You don’t want those officers dealing with people in a mental-health crisis.”

In the past, many officers didn’t see CIT as a way to get ahead in the bureau. Now, Yakots and Hettman say, they see it as an essential skill set for a cop.

“Attitudes will change,” Hettman says, “and the more senior people and the holdouts, they won’t have a choice but to change.”

Officer Herb Miller, 47, was a truck driver and National Guardsman before joining the Portland Police Bureau 15 years ago. He’s spent most of his time on the force dealing with the mentally ill, as one of the original members of the CIT unit and then spending a year on the bureau’s Mobile Crisis Unit. That assignment—limited to a year—ended in June.

Brad Yakots (L) and Casey Hettman (R) with unidentified person

Brad Yakots (L) and Casey Hettman (R) with unidentified person

The MCU is supposed to help people with mental illness who show up frequently on cops’ radar, before they have another confrontation with officers. The mobile unit consists of one sworn officer and a social worker with Project Respond, which is run by Cascadia Behavioral Healthcare, a private mental-health agency.

The DOJ settlement calls for expanding the availability of the unit. It doesn’t involve any extra training, but the bureau says the close on-the-ground work provides a wealth of knowledge.

Miller found a special draw to both the crisis intervention team and the mobile unit: Both his nephew and niece committed suicide.

“Somehow, with my training and experience, if I can help prevent that tragedy for someone else’s family, that would be rewarding,” Miller says.

Yet his time on the MCU was often frustrating. He and his partner tracked one man with mental problems who they knew had a gun. But under the law, the MCU team can’t force anyone into treatment, and can’t arrest anyone until they become a danger to themselves or others.

Last October, the man locked himself in his apartment and was pointing his gun out the window at people in the street. The situation ended peacefully, but only after it turned into a lengthy negotiation and an evacuation of the building.

“We had done all of that work ahead of time,” Miller says. “We still weren’t able to intervene and prevent the incident from happening. I saw the whole trajectory of the way it went, and we couldn’t intervene until he crossed the line.

“I had no more control or power than a regular officer.”

PPB officersBecause of his experience, Miller says he signed up for the CIT this time around out of a sense of obligation.

But the price of keeping beat cops apart from the mentally ill may be the psychological toll it takes on the officers who specialize in crisis intervention.

Hettman, during his first week as an officer, watched a woman he was trying to help jump from the Fremont Bridge to the pavement below; he heard her hit the ground. “That was my rude awakening to the mental-health issue,” he says.

Miller couldn’t save a man who jumped from the Vista Bridge. “Things like that get to you,” he says. “You have to compartmentalize it and leave it at work.”

And for these front-line teams, the psychological toll can mount.

“Going in as a CIT officer, they’re going in with a sense of, ‘OK I’ve been trained to help these people,’” says John Nicoletti, whose Denver-based firm, Nicoletti-Flater Associates, specializes in police psychology.

“When that doesn’t work, especially when it’s a traumatic ending like a suicide, you get the combination of the trauma, and second-guessing of what you could have done differently.”

Officers say that since the DOJ started its investigation in June 2011, they’ve been increasingly reluctant to use force, even when they think they should. The bureau says it was shifting its culture before that: Statistics show use of force has declined 33 percent since 2008.

But some cops say the DOJ report has created a chilling—and dangerous— effect.

During one ride-along WW took with police, three officers responded to a domestic-violence call at an apartment near Southeast Glisan Street and 106th Avenue. A pregnant woman was hurt, but she insisted she had fallen and that her boyfriend—with face tattoos and a bad attitude—hadn’t pushed her.

The angry boyfriend was bigger than the officers. In the end, they didn’t need to make an arrest—despite their fears they might have to use force to do it.

“I thought for a minute we would have to go hands-on,” one officer, Michael Roberts, says.

“I was just thinking about the Taser,” says another, Josh Silverman.

“I’m too scared to Taser now,” Roberts answers. “You gotta go hands-on.”

Silverman, 28, has been a cop for three years (he is a former WW intern) and says his academy training put an enormous emphasis on officers protecting themselves—be it with less-than-lethal weapons, or by going “hands-on,” using holds and other physical tactics to gain control.

“When you get out of the academy,” he says, “you think there are ninjas waiting around every corner to attack you.”

If there is a chilling effect from the DOJ stalling the use of force, some critics say it’s good—if only because police training has instilled too much paranoia among officers.

“There are people who walk the streets all the time thinking someone is going to hurt them,” says Dan Handelman, director of Portland Copwatch. “And they’re the ones we call mentally ill.”

Eriks Gabliks, director of the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training, says the police academy’s 16-week course has increased its role-playing scenarios on how to better communicate and diffuse situations. And as of Jan. 1, all cops-in-training will get 15 hours of mental and behavioral health training, up from 12.

The FBI, which tracks officer deaths nationwide, doesn’t keep statistics on at what point in an encounter an officer is killed. It also doesn’t track the mental health of those who kill cops intentionally.

The FBI does say that 72 American law enforcement officers were feloniously killed in 2011. Two were in Oregon, including one Eugene officer shot by a woman with severe mental illness.

Officer Macho, from the East Precinct, counters that he’s got a pinkie finger and a thumb that no longer fully function because he was afraid to use the appropriate level of force to end a volatile arrest. He tore the tendons of his pinkie chasing down and arresting a juvenile vandal; he tweaked the thumb when he says he was attempting to keep a man from punching him. In both cases, he says that four years ago, he would have used a Taser.

“With what’s come down from the Department of Justice, the public’s the real loser on this because there are many times when the officer feels like he’s got to choose between career survival and actually jumping in when he would have in the past.”

The DOJ report, Macho says, was a “hack job”—noting the report found fault with five cases out of thousands of arrests.

“What percentage of human beings get it as right as often as we do?” Macho asks.

Bouneff, of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, says the Clackamas and Marion county sheriff’s departments both have good reputations for the way they handle people in mental crises.

Both agencies started crisis intervention training in 2005, without an outside mandate, such as the one the DOJ has imposed on the Portland police.

Clackamas County Sheriff Craig Roberts added crisis intervention training only one month after taking office. “[Roberts] had identified there was a need for better training related to mental-health issues for deputies,” says department spokesman Sgt. Adam Phillips.

Clackamas doesn’t have a CIT team—Phillips says the county is too spread out to reliably dispatch a team. In Marion County, all deputies have received crisis intervention training, and those who want it can get advanced training.

“Voluntary programs around the country are really the most successful,” says Deputy Kevin Rau, formerly the Marion County Sheriff’s Department’s training coordinator.

What will success look like in Portland? The DOJ settlement calls for a series of quantitative measurements to see if the Portland police are making improvements: for example, use of force against those with real or perceived mental illness; the number of officers who frequently use force; the rate of Taser use; and complaints against cops.

Hales says he’s also looking at a more subjective measure, what he calls a more “modern and humane” police force.

“Are people that you talk to about the Police Bureau ready to call when there’s a problem on their street?” Hales says. “Or are they wary about calling?”

Yakots and Hettman can’t help but notice the irony in one recent call.

They were the first on the scene Nov. 26 after neighbors called police to a downtown apartment complex, where an 81-year-old man was hallucinating that cops were being shot and killed in his hallway. He was swinging a hatchet and had already chopped through a fire door to reach the imaginary police officers who had been shot.

The cops drew their guns. “He’s trying to save police officers,” Yakots recalls, “and we might actually wind up having to hurt the guy.”

They didn’t. They gave him clear commands, and he let them cuff him for a mental-health hold. He’s since been committed and could be in a mental-health facility for as long as six months.

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Feds, City of Portland reach settlement agreement on police reforms

Posted by admin2 on 26th October 2012

READ – Settlement Agreement (PDF download- 170KB)

WATCH – Press conference


Portland mayor, chief, and Oregon U.S. Attorney announce settlement on Portland police reforms

By Maxine Bernstein, The Oregonian, Oct. 26, 2010

Mayor Sam Adams

Mayor Sam Adams

Portland Mayor Sam Adams and Police Chief Mike Reese stood with U.S. Attorney Amanda Marshall Friday afternoon in City Hall to announce a settlement agreement that the city reached with the U.S. Department of Justice on reforms to Portland police policy, training and oversight.

Among the changes called for in the agreement, Portland must hire or retain a compliance officer and appoint a community liaison to oversee reforms of police policies. A 15-member Community Oversight Advisory Board will also be created.

The police bureau will also adopt the kind of crisis intervention team model used in Memphis and expand its single mobile crisis unit, which pairs one officer with one Project Respond mental health worker, to three units.

The bureau intends to set up a new “Addictions and Behavioral Health Unit” staffed with a lieutenant, a new crisis intervention coordinator, an analyst and the five officers in the bureau’s mobile crisis unit. The manager of the existing Service Coordination Team, which works to find housing, treatment and addiction services for frequent offenders of low-level crimes, will also serve in the new unit.

In addition, internal affairs investigations will now have to be completed within 180 days, federal officials said. To accomplish that goal, more investigators will be hired.

Portland City Auditor LaVonne Griffin-Valade said she’s committed to increasing the diversity of investigators working for the Independent Police Review Division. City records show that the division will get three new full-time staff, under the agreement. Griffin-Valade said she intends to bring on at least one new investigator who has a mental health background.

“This agreement is going to make the Portland Police Bureau better,” Adams said. “For me this is a watershed moment for the Portland Police Bureau.”

The city estimates the reforms will cost $3.5 million to implement.

A spreadsheet released at the conclusion of Friday’s news conference suggests that the start-up costs will be $519,301 and the annual ongoing costs will be $5.4 million.

The city figures show a gain of 32 new staff – 26 within the Portland Police Bureau, of which the majority are civilians, one attorney in the city attorney’s office, three full-time staff in the Independent Police Review Division and two staff members to the city’s Office of Equity.

A member of the Citizen Review Committee, which now hears citizen appeals of complaints against Portland police, will be added to the bureau’s Use of Force Review Board, which evaluates officer-involved shootings and use of force.

Chief Mike Reese

Chief Mike Reese

Reese also endorsed the 74-page agreement.

“We all agree we can do better as a police bureau and as a community,” the chief said. “This agreement will provide us a road map as we move forward.”

Joyce Harris, a member of the Albina Ministerial Alliance’s Coalition for Justice and Police Reform, urged the federal and city officials to recognize that community involvement is key to its success.

“I probably shouldn’t have to say this, but community engagement is critical,” Harris said. “We can’t let it fall apart, because lives are at stake.”

The agreement was negotiated after federal officials announced last month that their more than year-long investigation found Portland police engage in a pattern and practice of excessive force against people who suffer from or are perceived to suffer from mental illness.

On Sept. 13, Assistant Attorney General Thomas E. Perez reported in a 42-page letter to the mayor and chief that Portland police officers frequently escalate conflict, rush in to an encounter when they can hold back and continue to use force even when the need for it has waned.

Federal investigators concluded that the excessive force used by officers results from bureau “deficiencies in policy, training and supervision” that have been in place for a long time.

Federal officials called for an array of changes in bureau policies and practices, including restrictions on the use of Tasers, a revamped use of force policy that emphasizes the need to de-escalate conflicts, and the reinstatement of a specialized team of crisis intervention officers who would be called out to respond to calls involving people in mental health crisis.

The agreement will go to City Council for a first review on Thursday at 2 p.m.

Once the council formally approves the agreement, it will need to be signed by a federal judge and filed in U.S. District Court.

The federal justice department will formally file a civil lawsuit against the city, but then voluntarily dismiss the suit from the court’s active docket. At the same time, the federal government and the city will sign the formal agreement on reforms to be adopted.

The agreement will be legally enforceable, as it will remain under the court’s jurisdiction.

Federal justice officials have said they would be available to provide technical assistance to the police bureau to help with the reforms.

“This agreement is going to make the Portland Police Bureau better,” Adams said at Friday’s news conference.

Under the 74-page settlement agreement released Friday, federal justice officials identified principles it expects the Portland police to include in its revised use of force and Taser policies.

It said the Portland police shall use “disengagement and de-escalation techniques,” when possible, and/or call in specialized police units when practical “in order to reduce the need for force and increase officer and civilian safety.”

U.S. Attorney Amanda Marshall

U.S. Attorney Amanda Marshall

The agreement says Portland police will prohibit Taser use for pain compliance “against those suffering from mental illness or emotional crisis except in exigent circumstances, and then only to avoid the use of a higher level of force.”

It says that after the firing of one Taser cycle, officers shall evaluate the situation to determine if subsequent cycles are necessary, and that includes waiting for a reasonable amount of time to allow the person to comply with a police warning.

The agreement also covers supervisors’ responsibilities. Portland police are to revise their directives to require that supervisory officers complete “after-action reports” within 72 hours of the officers’ use of force.  Supervisors will also be subject to potential discipline or removal from their supervisory position for deficient investigations based on the “accuracy and completeness” of their after-action reports.

“All supervisors in the chain of command are accountable for inadequate reports and analysis,” the agreement states.

Under the agreement, a bureau inspector shall present a quarterly analysis of patterns or trends in Portland police use of force to the chief, the training division and the new training advisory council.

The inspector – a command level position in the bureau’s Professional Standards Division – will be expected to audit police use of force reports and ensure officers are acting according to bureau policy, their use of force reports are comprehensive and their supervisors are completing their responsibilities appropriately.

Under changes to training, the bureau is expected to instill expectations “that officers are committed to the constitutional rights of people with mental illness. The bureau must update its training plan annually, considering officer safety issues, misconduct complaints, problematic uses of force, court decisions and input from police and community members.

Last week, the police chief publicly released drafts of revised bureau policies for public comment, as city and federal officials were in the final throes of negotiations on the police reforms.

Some of the chief’s drafts did not go as far as justice officials had sought in several areas.

For example, federal officials urged the bureau to require officers involved in shootings to be interviewed immediately by detectives, instead of allowing a 48-hour wait after an incident. The Justice Department also urged the city to restrict the number of Taser cycles an officer can fire at a suspect.

The bureau did not include those standards in its drafts, but made other changes. For example, the chief wants to require officers involved in shootings to provide an “on-scene interview” to a detective, after given a reasonable chance to confer with a lawyer or union representative. It will be a briefing on what occurred, but a full sit-down interview could still be delayed for 48 hours, under union contract.

The chief’s draft policy on Taser use does not restrict the number of stun gun cycles an officer may fire at a single person. But it says, “members should evaluate their force options and give strong consideration to other force options, if the Taser is not effective after two” cycles on the same person.

Last month, federal and city officials said the proposed settlement between the Portland police and federal justice department would ensure that the city:

  • revises its use of force policies so officers have “necessary guidance” when encountering someone with mental illness or someone perceived to have a mental illness;
  • revamps its Taser policies to focus on de-escalating encounters arising from welfare checks or low-level offenses;
  • expands its single Mobile Crisis Unit team, which pairs an officer with a Project Respond mental health expert, to provide 24-hour, 7-day-a-week coverage; and
  • sets up a Mental Health Triage Desk at the dispatch center to ensure mental health-related calls are properly dispatched to the appropriate agency.

Under the preliminary agreement, the city also agreed to work with community mental health providers to try to open a 24-hour secure drop-off, or walk-in, center that will give officers more options when helping people with mental illness. The Police Bureau would actively use its Early Intervention System to track officers with many citizen complaints or use of force complaints to help curb problem behavior; and expedite internal affairs inquiries. And, a community group would be created to continually monitor the requested reforms.


Statement from Mayor Sam Adams

By Sam Adams, Oct. 26, 2012

Dear Portlander,

I hope that you are enjoying our change of seasons. City government continues to make big changes as well.

I am writing to let you know that we have a proposed agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) that will not only improve the Portland Police Bureau (PPB) but also fast-track healthcare reforms that will increase the availability of community-based mental health care services.

Some solutions will require additional funds, others expedite federal and state healthcare reforms already underway, and others will require labor negotiations with our employee labor organizations.

The proposed Agreement is separated into several parts, which I have summarized here:

1. Use of Force:

PPB will retain its current force policies, which emphasize the use of less force than the maximum permitted by law. The PPB will add to its force policies de-escalation techniques and consideration about the mental health status of the person encountered (if available).

In addition, new policies reflecting best practices will be instituted regarding use of “Tasers.” Such policies generally will require verbal warnings, restrict the use of Tasers on people suffering from mental illness, and prohibit their use on handcuffed suspects.

I welcome your comments on these draft policies, currently available on PPB’s website.

The draft Agreement with DOJ strengthens PPB policies regarding force reports, to ensure they are timely, complete and require on-scene investigations by supervisors when a force event occurs. All supervisors in the chain of command are subject to discipline for the accuracy and completeness of force reports and investigations.

The use of force will also be subject to quarterly audits by an independent Inspector who will identify and correct deficiencies revealed by this trend analysis.

2. Training:

The Training Division will revise and update PPB’s Training plan annually to take into account any problematic uses of force and input from the community. PPB must also train all officers on the requirements of this proposed settlement Agreement. The independent Inspector also will audit the PPB’s training program using a list of performance standards that PPB must meet.

3. Community-Based Mental Health Services:

DOJ recognizes that there are other participants in the mental health infrastructure besides the City that control the quality of mental health care, including the State of Oregon, Multnomah County, Community Care Organizations (CCOs), community mental health providers, health care and emergency department providers, private insurers, and many others.

This proposed Agreement is only binding on the City of Portland, but DOJ expects community partners to assist the City to remedy lack of community-based addiction and mental health services to Medicaid and uninsured residents.

I am grateful that the CCOs and community partners have agreed to fast-track mental health service improvements to mid-2013. As such, the City, CCOs and community partners will identify opportunities for the dispatch of mental health professionals instead of police officers if and when appropriate. We will also work to ensure that PPB has better resources to gather real-time information when a person who has encountered the police is having a mental health crisis and needs assistance.

4. Crisis Intervention:

The PPB has agreed to develop an Addictions and Behavioral Health Unit (ABHU) within 60 days of the agreement’s effective date. It will oversee PPB’s Crisis Intervention Team, a Mobile Crisis Prevention Team and a Service Coordination Team.

An ABHU Advisory Committee comprised of individuals from across various government entities and mental health services providers (among others) will be established to assist the City as it provides these enhanced services.

PPB will continue to provide Crisis Intervention training to all its officers. In addition, the City will establish a “Memphis Model Crisis Intervention Team” and recruit volunteer officers to serve on that team. Such members will receive additional specialized training and will be dispatched if a crisis event occurs involving someone with a real or perceived mental illness.

PPB will expand the Mobile Crisis Prevention Team (formerly known as a Mobile Crisis Unit) to one car per PPB Precinct from one car citywide. The car shall be staffed by one sworn PPB officer and a civilian mental health professional and shall be a full time assignment.

The Bureau of Emergency Communication’s 9-1-1 dispatchers will complete training to triage calls related to mental health issues to the appropriate first responder resource.

5. Employee Information System:

The City has an employee information system to gather data and assist issues affecting employees. This will be enhanced to earlier and more effectively identify at-risk employees so that proper training can occur.

6. Officer Accountability: 

The City will reduce the timeline for all administrative investigations of misconduct to 180 days from the receipt of a complaint. This timeline includes appeals to the Citizens Review Committee.

The City will also revise its protocols for “compelled statements” from officers involved in force incidents to ensure that the law is followed while still obtaining more timely information. The City must submit this protocol for DOJ approval

PPB’s Police Review Board, which advises the Chief on administrative reviews and recommendations for discipline, will include a member from the Citizen Review Committee in cases where use of force is being reviewed. The Citizens Review Committee will be expanded to 11 members.

7. Community Outreach: 

There are a number of changes concerning community outreach. The Community and Police Relations Committee is part of the Portland Human Rights commission, and its function is to bring together members ofPortland’s diverse communities to improve community and police relations. The committee will be renamed the Community Oversight Advisory Board (COAB) and its functions and membership will change.  Its new functions include assessing the implementation of the Settlement Agreement, providing information to the community about the Agreement and its implementation and to contribute to the development of a PPB Community Engagement and Outreach Plan.

The 20 member COAB, which includes 15 voting members and 5 advisory members, will be chaired by a Compliance Officer and Community Liaison (COCL). Voting members of the Board include five Human Rights Commission members, five members chosen by City Council members and five members chosen by the community.

8. Implementation:

The City will hire a COCL within approximately 90 days. The duties of the COCL including preparing quarterly public reports regarding PPB’s compliance with the agreement hold quarterly town hall meetings and providing recommendations to ensure PPB is in compliance with the agreement.

In addition, PPB will designate a Compliance Coordinator to serve as a liaison between PPB, the COCL and DOJ. The Compliance Coordinator will coordinate PPB’s compliance activities, provide data to DOJ and collection information for the COCL.

9. Enforcement:  

To permit federal court oversight, DOJ will file a complaint against the City and will file this settlement agreement at the same time. If disputes arise regarding PPB’s compliance with the agreement, there is a dispute mechanism that favors discussions and mediation before court action.

When I took over as Police Commissioner, I said I would aggressively pursue changes that would make the Portland Police Bureau the best in the nation. To that end, Commissioner Dan Saltzman, community leaders, and I invited the federal government to conduct this evaluation and make recommendations. I embrace the changes called for in this proposed agreement.

We have worked toward an agreement that effects positive change in the way that the Portland Police Bureau provides service to the community. Council will take public comment at a hearing on November 1, 2012 at 2 pm in City Council chambers.

Onward,

 

 

 

Mayor Sam Adams
City of Portland


PPB announces plan to manage use of force

From KGW.com, October 26, 2012

The Portland Police Bureau has announced a plan to better deal with emergency calls involving the mentally ill, which would include using only one Taser at a time.

The bureau made the changes after a U.S. Department of Justice investigation concluded it had engaged in “a pattern or practice of excessive use of force,” specifically when dealing with the mentally ill.

The new plan, put forth at a press conference Friday afternoon, will focus on de-escalation tactics, Portland Mayor Sam Adams said. Only one Taser will be used at a time and officers will attempt to use handcuffs between Taser deployments.

“For me this is a watershed moment for the City of Portland, for the Portland Police bureau, also the fire bureau and 911, and our first responders,” Adams said. “We are fully embracing the responsibility. We have and realities we face when it comes to dealing with folks who are perceived or suffering from mental illness.”

The DOJ report last month found that law enforcement agencies are often the first responders in mental health crises, so the new agreement will increase the mental health resources involved in such calls.

There will be three mobile crisis units on the streets, rather than just one. Each unit will include a specially-trained officer and mental health expert.

“As police officers we embrace our role in these changes, and the challenges we face in difficult circumstances every day,” said Portland Police Chief Mike Reese. “We all agree we can do better as a police bureau and community. This agreement will provide us a roadmap as we move forward.”

The cost of the agreement was estimated at $3.3 million. Adams did not say how it would be funded.


Portland Police, U.S. Department of Justice, Release Agreement on Mental Health Reforms

By Andrea Damewood, Willamette Week, Oct. 26, 2012

Portland mayor Sam Adams (L) and Chief Mike Reese (R)

Portland mayor Sam Adams (L) and Chief Mike Reese (R)

The U.S. Department of Justice and the city of Portland released a settlement agreement Friday on changes the city must make in order to stay out of court, in the wake of the DOJ’s findings that police have a pattern of using excessive force against the mentally ill.

The agreement ramps up both internal and external supervision of the department, expands police crisis training and response and further restricts officers’ use of Tasers.

Unlike many cities slapped with a DOJ case, Portland will not have an independent DOJ monitor of its reforms. Rather, the city must hire or retain a compliance officer and liaison to track progress. The liaison—to be selected from three candidates by the city council—will provide quarterly public reports, U.S. Attorney Amanda Marshall said during a press conference Friday at City Hall.

Officers must also only use one Taser at a time, and must attempt to handcuff suspects after each 5-second discharge of the weapon, she says. That portion of the recommendation doesn’t exactly jibe with a draft policy revision released by Chief Mike Reese last week, which did not restrict the number of Taser cycles that could be used on a person.

Oregon ACLU president Dave Fidanque said that his agency will meet with the police to express some of their concerns, including those about the draft Taser policy.

“There’s other stuff that needs to happen,” he says, adding that the bureau should ban stun gun use on those practicing active resistance—which includes actions like “tensing”­—and restrict use to those aggressively resisting officers.

The Portland Police Bureau will also create a Crisis Intervention Team of specially trained officers who will respond to all calls suspected to involve mental illness. The agreement will also expand the police Mobile Crisis Unit—a vehicle pairing one officer and a private social worker—to a 24 hour program.

A 15-member Community Oversight Advisory Board will also be created. The city auditor’s office will also hire three new investigators, including at least one with a background in mental health, City Auditor LaVonneGriffin-Valade says.

The cost is expected to be $5.8 million in the first year, and includes 26 new staff members in the PPB and six new staff members elsewhere in the city.

“I haven’t figured out how to pay for it, but we will,” Mayor Sam Adams said.

Adams, Chief Mike Reese and Commissioner Amanda Fritz all also spoke at the press conference Friday, and heralded the agreement’s stipulations.

“We’re fully embracing the responsibility that we have and the reality we face in dealing with those with mental illness,” Adams says. “We embrace the totality of our role in the mental health system.”

The U.S. Department of Justice released its report on the department’s “pattern and practice” of unconstitutional use of excessive force against those with mental illness. Friday’s agreement was due on Oct. 12, but the city needed extra time to complete the 74-page document.

Other mental health services are expected to be bolstered as a result of the DOJ’s report—those are due in mid-May, according to the city.


Portland, U.S. agree on police reforms; use of force against the mentally ill leads to change

By Steven DuBois, Associated Press, from the Register-Guard, Oct. 27, 2010

U.S. attorney Amanda Marshall

U.S. attorney Amanda Marshall

The city of Portland has reached a proposed settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice on police reforms in the wake of an investigation that found that officers too frequently use excessive force against the mentally ill.

The deal announced Friday afternoon by Mayor Sam Adams, Police Chief Mike Reese and U.S. Attorney Amanda Marshall includes more oversight of the police bureau as well as additional training and revisions to its policy on the use of stun guns.

“When I took over as police commissioner, I said I would aggressively pursue changes. These are the changes that will make Portland a better place,” Adams said via Twitter and Facebook.

The City Council will hear public comment on the settlement at its meeting Thursday. Once the council approves it, the agreement must be signed by a federal judge and filed in U.S. District Court.

The Justice Department opened its investigation last year to examine whether Portland police engaged in a “pattern or practice” of excessive force when dealing with the mentally ill. Agency officials concluded in September that such a pattern exists, and began negotiating with city leaders on reforms.

The city has agreed to hire a compliance officer to ensure that the agreement is followed and form a Community Oversight Advisory Board. The board, which will be chaired by the compliance officer, will include 15 voting members and five advisory panelists.

The Justice Department investigation listed several examples in which officers used stun guns without justification against people in a mental health crisis.

The police bureau’s updated policy limits the use of stun guns on people suffering from mental illness and prohibits their use on handcuffed suspects.

It encourages officers to attempt to handcuff suspects rather than subject them to repeated “cycles” from Tasers, referred to as electronic control weapons in the settlement agreement.

“After one standard ECW cycle (5 seconds) the officer shall re-evaluate the situation to determine if subsequent cycles are necessary,” the agreement states, “including waiting for a reasonable amount of time to allow the subject to comply with the warning.”

In other reforms, the city must:

Create a crisis intervention team, composed of patrol officers with specialized training, to be dispatched when a mental health issue is the main reason for the call.

Expand its mobile crisis units from one car citywide to one car per precinct. The cars will be staffed with an officer and a civilian mental health worker.

Ensure that investigations of officer misconduct are completed within 180 days.


Portland police, DOJ reach mental health agreements – Portland Business Journal, Oct. 26, 2012

DOJ, Portland Reach Agreement On Use Of Force – OPB News, Oct. 26, 2012

City files draft police accountability agreement to avoid federal lawsuit – Portland Tribune, Oct. 26, 2012

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Portland police efforts to fix crisis response are a failure, feds say

Posted by admin2 on 15th September 2012

From The Oregonian, September 15, 2012

The U.S. Department of Justice was blatantly clear in its report last week that the Portland Police Bureau’s practice of training all its officers in crisis intervention techniques — adopted after the high-profile death in police custody of James P. Chasse Jr. — isn’t working.

The review found Portland’s crisis training sorely lacks many of the key components federal officials would expect to see in a successful program: “live exposure” to mental health consumers and family members, role-playing scenarios and community collaboration.

“During our investigation, we spoke with advocates who desired greater inclusion, but were refused access to the curriculum and were not allowed to attend training sessions,” the federal officials said.

Assistant Attorney General Thomas E. Perez found the bureau’s tight control over the training unwarranted and ineffective. He urged the Portland police to set up what mental health advocates, retired and current Portland police have advocated for years: a select team of officers with unique skills to serve as the “go-to” police called out to de-escalate mental health crisis calls.

“There is growing evidence that a crisis team response is likely to result in a better outcome and reinforce public confidence in policing,” Perez wrote to Portland Mayor Sam Adams.

The federal investigators also recommended such a team be led by a “dedicated police-based crisis intervention coordinator.” That appears to be a direct snub to the civilian mental health expert Leisbeth Gerritsen, who has led the Police bureau’s crisis intervention training under the past two chiefs.

Portland police used to have the very type of specialized program that Perez is now seeking.

From 1995 to 2006, the bureau had a crisis intervention team consisting of a select group of officers who volunteered for the work, reported to either an officer or a sergeant and invited mental health consumers to participate in their training. Bureau officials scrapped that and introduced a mandatory 40 hours of crisis intervention training for all officers by 2007.

U.S. Department of Justice finds pattern of excessive force at the Portland Police Bureau U.S. Department of Justice finds pattern of excessive force at the Portland Police Bureau The Portland Police Bureau has engaged in a pattern of excessive force, particularly involving people with mental illness, the U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday. “While we have indeed identified serious deficiencies, we have reached a preliminary agreement to improve public safety and to ensure the Constitution is respected,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney General Thomas E. Perez.

The change came after the controversial 2006 death in police custody of Chasse, who suffered from paranoid schizophrenia. Chasse was chased, then tackled by police after police thought he was urinating on a sidewalk in the Pearl District. He died from blunt force trauma to the chest.

“Expanding the training to all the officers was welcomed at the time,” said Bob Joondeph, executive director of Disability Rights Oregon. “I don’t think anybody was clear about how effective it would be, but it was something.”

Justice Department officials argued the bureau can’t expect officers to become proficient with a week’s worth of training.

“The 40-hour crisis intervention training curriculum is not what makes a specialized crisis intervention officer an expert in handling mental illness calls,” they wrote.

“While we commend PPB for training all officers on crisis matters,” federal officials wrote, “this approach assumes incorrectly that all PPB officers are equally capable of safely handling crisis situations and fails to build greater capacity among qualified officers.”

During the federal review, a Portland patrol officer told investigators that his job was “to put people in jail, not to provide social services,” the report said.

Clearly, federal officials said, this officer would not be the appropriate person to conduct a welfare check on a person with mental illness.

The Justice Department officials blasted the bureau for failing to allow community input on training curriculum, for preventing stakeholders from attending the crisis intervention courses, and for abandoning role-playing by officers during the class.

Bringing people with mental health problems into the crisis intervention classes could help reduce officers’ fears of people with mental illness, the federal officials said.

“There does not appear to be good reason to deny reasonable access to a crisis intervention course” to people with mental illness, family members, advocates or mental health workers, the review found. “One of the most effective ways to address the stigma of mental illness is to increase direct exposure to people with mental illness.”

Portland police now discuss crisis intervention scenarios instead of “role-playing” in front of peers. That approach doesn’t measure up, federal officials said.

Their training days are scattered over multiple weeks, they found, rather than presented in one continuous week of class, which would be more effective. The course also is given to new officers too early in their careers, federal officials said.

Recruits often lack the maturity that experience on the street brings and are not generally “ready to receive, absorb and implement critical information about how mental illness calls need a different response than the more common police calls.”

Mental health advocates in Portland have spent years pushing for changes like those recommended in the federal review.

The police bureau’s move to mandatory training “basically X’d out the community,” said Beckie Child, a former executive director of Mental Health America of Oregon. “When I would raise that issue, I would basically get pooh-poohed.”

Terri Walker, board president of the Multnomah chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, told The Oregonian in January 2011 that consumers of mental health services were afraid to call Portland police because they didn’t know if they’d get an understanding officer familiar with their needs.

Retired Portland police Sgt. Karl McDade, who was the first coordinator of Portland’s specialized crisis intervention team, said the Justice Department review hit the nail on the head.

“Since the police bureau eliminated the crisis intervention team, they’ve had a continuing problem,” McDade said Friday. “You cannot train police officers coming out of the academy to deal with mentally ill people. They all want to catch burglars and robbers.”

McDade said he hopes the bureau follows the federal direction.

“The chief is a nice man, but in this area, he’s made a mistake,” McDade said. “I think the chief and the mayor have to admit that and change course.”

In the last year, Portland Police Chief Mike Reese repeatedly has defended the bureau’s approach to crisis intervention. In January, he called the bureau’s strategy “innovative and creative.” In particular, he pointed to the mandatory crisis intervention classes and the bureau’s one-car mobile crisis unit, which pairs one officer with a civilian mental health care worker.

Federal officials found otherwise. They noted that the one-car mobile unit doesn’t respond to crisis calls and is largely ineffective because its hours are limited, noon to 10 p.m. four days a week.

Adams said he agrees with the Justice Department’s criticisms. The mayor said, though, that the specialized team recommended by Perez is not enough. Adams plans to increase the number of mobile crisis cars, pairing specially trained officers with Project Respond workers, who specialize in mental health services. He also wants dispatchers to route certain mental health calls to mental health providers instead of to police.

The chief is willing to put in place the federal recommendations on crisis intervention training, his spokesman said.

“We believe we have had a valid perspective about how CIT should be implemented,” Lt. Robert King said. “But we are more than willing to see DOJ’s perspective and implement their recommendations.”

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