Showing posts with label police shooting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label police shooting. Show all posts

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Georgia Veteran Killed Police By Had PTSD

Wife of man killed by Paulding County deputies speaks
WSB TV 2 News Atlanta
November 21, 2015
PAULDING COUNTY, Ga. — The wife of a war veteran shot and killed by Paulding County deputies says her husband suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, and believes his death could have been prevented.

Christina Tarrant says her husband William Tarrant, 39, was getting treatment for PTSD, but needed more help.

Tarrant says she tried to tell deputies that, but he was killed anyway.

"I kept telling the police officers from 10-11 in the morning up until (he was shot) that he is not right in the head. He needs help," Tarrant said.

Tarrant told Channel 2's Matt Johnson her husband was a 10-year combat veteran with a Purple Heart.

"There's no better definition of a hero other than what my husband displayed," Tarrant said.

Tarrant says her husband went to his parents' house Friday morning to check on their 6-month-old son Liam and his behavior raised red flags.
read more here


Authorities release name of man shot, killed after pointing gun at deputies November 20, 2015

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Iraq Veteran Killed by Police in Miami

Reminder, police officers have no choice too often. The last thing they want to do is shoot a veteran. They know the person in front of them was willing to die for the sake of someone else at one point in their lives. We're the ones forgetting that simple fact.
Police shoot man dead after stun guns fail to subdue him
Miami Herald
BY CHARLES RABIN
November 18, 2015

Before two Opa-locka cops gunned down a man Wednesday morning — the seventh shooting by South Florida law enforcement since Friday — the man jumped on a patrol car and smashed its window, then withstood the blast of two electronic shock devices meant to subdue him, police said.

Police said the devices had so little effect that the man remained standing and continued to threaten the officers until they shot and killed him.

“There’s a witness who corroborated he had a weapon. Some type of stick or crowbar.

According to them [after officers deployed their stun guns] he still continued forward with something in his hand,” said David Chiverton, Opa-locka’s assistant city manager.

Cornelius Brown, 25, was the second of the seven police shooting victims to die. On Tuesday, Leon Yohans, 28, was killed more than a mile from a Wendy’s restaurant just west of Cutler Bay after he held up the fast food restaurant manager at gunpoint, police said. Officers said they opened fire when Yohans produced a firearm, which was recovered near his body on a canal bank.

An arrest affidavit from 2012 provided to the Herald from news partner CBS 4 claims that Yohans was a discharged Iraq war veteran who had moved in with his parents and suffered post-traumatic stress disorder.
read more here

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Death of Titus Latchison Ruled Homicide

Death of Killeen veteran shot by police in 2014 ruled a homicide
Killeen Daily Herald
Jacob Brooks
Herald staff writer
November 16, 2015
On the day he was shot, Latchison called a suicide hotline threatening to kill himself, according to the report. “When police arrived, the decedent began throwing knives and was subsequently shot by officers.”
Titus Latchison served in the Army for 13 years as an aviation fueler, and deployed twice to Iraq and once to Afghanistan, his family said. Family members said Latchison suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, but he denied it for years.
The death of Titus Latchison, a troubled Army veteran who threw knives at police outside his Killeen home in 2014, was ruled a homicide.

Latchison, 37, a sergeant who got out of the Army at Fort Hood in 2011, was shot by a Killeen police officer on April 4, 2014, outside his home in the 4500 block of Golden Gate Drive in Killeen. Latchison died Sept. 4, 2015, at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Temple.

An autopsy was performed by the Southwestern Institute of Forensic Sciences at Dallas.

Although Latchison died almost a year and a half after he was shot by police, the institute found that the injuries caused by the shooting resulted in his death.

“Based on the case history and autopsy findings, it is our opinion that Titus Romale Latchison, a 37-year-old male, died as a result of the sequelae of remote gunshot wounds,” according to the autopsy report.

On the day he was shot, Latchison called a suicide hotline threatening to kill himself, according to the report. “When police arrived, the decedent began throwing knives and was subsequently shot by officers.”
read more here

Friday, October 9, 2015

Fate of Fort Bragg Soldier with PTSD in Hands of Army Board

UPDATE
Fort Bragg soldier guilty of misconduct; separation will allow health care
Fay Observer
By Greg Barnes Staff writer
October 9, 2015

A three-member board recommended Friday that Fort Bragg Staff Sgt. Joshua Eisenhauer be separated from the Army on a general discharge under honorable conditions.

The board agreed that Eisenhauer was guilty of misconduct but bucked Fort Bragg's desire that he be separated from service under an other-than-honorable discharge.

The recommendation means that Eisenhauer, who doctors say suffers from severe post-traumatic stress disorder, will one day become eligible for health care through the Department of Veterans Affairs.

"This has made me proud of the Army today," Eisenhauer's father, Mark, said moments after the board announced its recommendation. "They got the truth out. This was what was important to us."
read more here

Army board deliberating over fate of Fort Bragg soldier, Joshua Eisenhauer 
FayObserver
By Greg Barnes Staff writer
Posted: Thursday, October 8, 2015
Conormon, along with lawyer Mark Waple, is fighting for the Army to provide Eisenhauer medical care for the rest of his life. They contend that Eisenhauer was so wracked by PTSD that he suffered a flashback and thought he was shooting at Afghan insurgents - not at police and firefighters - from his Austin Creek apartment in west Fayetteville.
Undated photo of Joshua Eisenhauer
A three-member board began the process Thursday of deciding whether to separate Fort Bragg Staff Sgt. Joshua Eisenhauer from the Army.
Eisenhauer was sentenced Aug. 6 in Cumberland County Superior Court to between 10 and 18 years in prison for shooting at Fayetteville police and firefighters from his apartment on Jan. 12, 2012.

Now the separation board is tasked with deciding whether Eisenhauer is guilty of misconduct, whether he should be separated from the Army, and, if so, under what grade of service.

The panel is expected to reach those findings today and then make a recommendation to the commanding general of the 18th Airborne Corps and Fort Bragg.
Eisenhauer, who enlisted in 2005 after a conviction for resisting arrest near his home in Fort Worth, Texas, twice deployed to Afghanistan - in 2007-08 and 2009-10.

Soldiers who were with Eisenhauer on his first deployment said they experienced hundreds of firefights, sometimes as many as two or three a day.

Their job as a theater task force in Helmand province and other areas of Afghanistan was to move toward "the sounds of the guns," Staff Sgt. John Drollinger said.

Drollinger said the task force rooted out enemy insurgents, often by knocking down doors and killing them. At times, he and other soldiers said, their unit was forced to fight without sleep in stretches that lasted for days.

Drollinger and other soldiers who testified all used similar words to describe Eisenhauer: loyal, trustworthy, unwavering, honorable and dedicated.
read more here

Eugene Police Chief Says Killing Veteran "Tragedy for family and community"

Police chief rules officers followed policy in Brian Babb shooting, announces more reforms
But Eugene Police Chief Pete Kerns also says his officers followed department policy
The Register-Guard
By Christian Hill
OCT. 9, 2015
The deadly encounter occurred less than an hour after Babb’s therapist called 911 to report that Babb, who suffered from severe post-traumatic stress disorder and a traumatic brain injury, was suicidal and had fired a gun in the house.
Eugene Police Chief Pete Kerns announced Thursday that his sworn officers followed department policies during their response to a 911 call that ended when an officer fatally shot a veteran in emotional crisis.

The March 30 killing of Brian Babb, a former captain in the Oregon Army National Guard who deployed to Afghanistan, prompted many questions in the community about the department’s handling of the call and prompted the department to make a series of reforms to improve its response to residents in emotional crisis.

Kerns again called Babb’s killing a “tragedy for his family and our community.”

“The experience of this incident has caused us to re-examine our practices and philosophies thoroughly and to advance our performance in high-risk complex calls for service,” Kerns wrote in concluding the 16-page report of his findings after the months-long internal review of the officer-involved shooting.
Kerns said the shift of the initial dispatcher ended during the police response and another dispatcher took her place. Kerns said he didn’t know the exact time of the shift change, and his report is silent on what effect, if any, it had on the police response.

His report said a dispatcher also erroneously reported over the radio to responding officers that Babb had fired his gun into a window, confirming what The Register-Guard had previously reported.
The Eugene Police Department has announced nearly a dozen policy changes and directives in the wake of the March 30 fatal shooting of Brian Babb to improve its response to veterans and other residents in emotional crisis:
1. Organize program to provide support for struggling veterans before they reach crisis.
2. Instruct supervisors to not interrupt if a resident is talking with a mental health professional.
3. Have at least 2 crisis negotiators respond to calls involving mental health crises.
4. Require that officers be sent to the location of a therapist if they are engaged with a barricaded subject to work together to resolve crisis.
5. Develop a decision-making model, similar to one in Scotland, to help officers navigate dangerous encounters.
6. Track the deployment of department’s armored vehicle.
7. Study the use of armored vehicles audio and video equipment so it — rather than an exposed officer — can monitor surroundings.
8. Instruct officers who completed 40-hour crisis intervention instruction to take refresher course.
9. Develop crisis intervention training program for 911 center personnel.
10. Require 911 call takers and dispatchers who initially take “high-risk” call to remain on it until conclusion.
11. Allow officers to wear emblems on uniforms denoting their military service to help connect with veterans.
read more here

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Family of PTSD Veteran Can Sue After Police Shooting


Judge allows lawsuit against Maine officer who killed veteran to go forward
Bangor Daily News
By Judy Harrison, BDN Staff
Posted Oct. 06, 2015

PORTLAND, Maine — A federal judge has ruled that an excessive force lawsuit over the death of a troubled Army veteran may go forward but only against the officer, not the police chief or the town of Farmington.

The parents of a veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder who was shot and killed nearly four years ago in front of the Farmington police station filed a wrongful death and civil rights lawsuit in 2013 against the town, Police Chief Jack Peck, and Ryan Rosie, the officer who shot and killed Justin Michael Crowley-Smilek on Nov. 19, 2011.

The Maine attorney general’s office in May 2012 found that Rosie was justified in shooting Crowley-Smilek, 26, of Farmington. The report said that Rosie took cover behind a police cruiser after Crowley-Smilek ignored demands that he take his hands out of his pockets. Rosie fired after the veteran took a butcher knife out of his pocket and charged at the officer.

The lawsuit, filed in November 2013 in federal court in Portland by Hunter Tzovarras, the Bangor attorney representing Crowley-Smilek’s parents, claimed that the veteran went to the Farmington police station the day he was killed to ask for help “regarding mental health services.”
read more here

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Wade Baker's Family Hopes To Save Others

We hear this a lot. “We gave him all the support and help we could, but we weren’t told a lot of things,” said Candace Baker, Wade’s mother. “A lot of things were hidden from us. We didn’t know things were that bad.” But we also keep hearing about how much the Department of Defense, the VA and all the charities are doing to make sure veterans and families know.

The first time I heard PTSD, I didn't have a clue what it was. Average folks like me had no way of knowing that experts had been studying it for over a decade. They knew it all! They knew about the cause of PTSD, what it did to the veterans as much as they knew what it did to their families. They also knew what to do to help all of us heal and live better lives to this wound that could not be cured.

They said medication would level off the chemicals in their minds but that was just one part of healing. They also needed to do physical therapy to teach their bodies to react more calmly instead of reacting with adrenaline pumped anger. Their research didn't end there. They knew healing required emotional healing as well by addressing the spirituality component. If you look up the word "component" you find "part or element of a larger whole" and that is exactly what it is. The largest part of the veteran hit by PTSD.

Putting therapy into all three parts of the whole heals. Leave out the most important part and you have needless suffering sucking out hope for the veteran and his family.

Now that you know what was known, you need to know when all that happened. It was back in 1982 when this average person discovered what the experts already knew. That's how long we've had to get it all right. Now maybe you know more about why I get so sick to my stomach when I still hear families say, they didn't know.
Family of killed veteran hopes to help others cope with PTSD
KCCI News 8
Rose Heaphy
Aug 21, 2015

DES MOINES, Iowa —The family of Wade Baker, the veteran shot in a North Carolina church after exchanging fire with police, hopes to share his tragic story to help other families living with post-traumatic stress disorder.

The family said for almost two decades, Baker struggled with PTSD and a brain injury he sustained during his service.

They said his struggle is much like thousands of other veterans living with the disorder.

“We gave him all the support and help we could, but we weren’t told a lot of things,” said Candace Baker, Wade’s mother. “A lot of things were hidden from us. We didn’t know things were that bad.”

Wade joined the Army in 1989 and served for nine years during Operation Desert Storm, according to his family.

“He was very proud of that, I think, but he wasn’t the same when he came home,” said his mother.

When he returned, his family said he was no longer the fun-loving teen he used to be. Instead, he was a quieter man who attempted suicide and faced demons at night.

He would wake up screaming, crying, sweating and shaking,” said Laura Thomas, Wade’s sister.

In recent years, Baker’s parents said their son seemed better.

Three years ago, Baker received a service dog to help calm him and cope with PTSD.
read more here

Decorated Veteran Father of 9 Dies in Gunfire at Church
Thursday, August 20, 2015

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Decorated Veteran Father of 9 Dies in Gunfire at Church

UPDATE August 21, 2015
Wade Baker was on the Dr. Phil show in 2007 talking about PTSD
Man Killed in Police Shooting Appeared on Dr. Phil, Discussed PTSD
Father of 9 dies in gunfire at church; Family releases statement 
Wade Allen Baker was decorated veteran, family says
WYFF 4 News
By Carla Field
UPDATED 3:39 PM EDT Aug 20, 2015
Wade was also a military veteran. He served in the U.S. Army from approximately August 1989 to November 1998. His military occupational specialty was mechanized infantryman, and he received an honorable discharge. His military awards include: Army Commendation Award (second award), Army Achievement Medal, Joint Meritorious Unit Service Award, Good Conduct Medal (third award), National Defense Service Award, Southwest Asia Service Medal with three Bronze Service Stars, Armed Forces Service Medal, Overseas Service Ribbon, Kuwait Liberation Medal (Kuwait), Kuwait Liberation Medal (Saudi Arabia) and others.
WAYNESVILLE, N.C. —The family of a man who died at a North Carolina church after an exchange of gunfire with officers released a statement Thursday in which they spotlighted his highly awarded time in the military.

Multiple law enforcement agencies responded to a 911 call claiming that four people had been shot at about 3:15 p.m. Wednesday at Maple Grove Baptist Church on Stamey Cove Road in Waynesville.

Sgt. Heidi Warren of the Haywood County Sheriff’s Office said a man, later identified as Wade Allen Baker, 44, of Clyde, alone in the church when law enforcement crews arrived. The man exchanged gunfire with the officers, she said.

The SBI said Thursday that Baker was pronounced dead at the scene. No one else was injured in the gunfire. Officials have not said who fired the shot that killed Baker. read more here

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Lawyers Want Fort Bragg Soldier's Sentence Changed

Lawyers seek corrected sentence for Fort Bragg soldier suffering from PTSD
FayObserver
By Greg Barnes Staff writer
August 18, 2015
Lawyers, family members and psychiatrists contend that Eisenhauer's severe PTSD and addiction to a prescription anti-anxiety medication caused him to have a flashback, believing he was shooting at enemy insurgents in Afghanistan.
Joshua Eisenhauer
Staff Sgt. Joshua Eisenhauer talks to one of his lawyers during his sentencing Thursday.
A lawyer for Fort Bragg Staff Sgt. Joshua Eisenhauer has filed a motion seeking to correct a sentence handed down Aug. 6 that landed Eisenhauer in prison for up to 18 years for shooting at police and firefighters in 2012.

In his motion for appropriate relief, lawyer Larry McGlothlin argues that the state did not substantially rebut defense testimony that Eisenhauer suffers from severe post-traumatic stress disorder and needs immediate professional treatment. The motion was filed Monday afternoon in Cumberland County Superior Court.

Eisenhauer pleaded guilty in February to shooting at police and firefighters after they responded to a report of a fire at Austin Creek Apartments in west Fayetteville on Jan. 13, 2012. Police shot Eisenhauer four times during a standoff. Police and firefighters escaped serious injury.

On Aug. 6, Cumberland County Superior Court Judge Jim Ammons sentenced Eisenhauer to between 10 and 18 years in prison after listening to about four hours of testimony.

Among those who testified, psychiatrist G. Martin Woodard said that on the night of the incident, Eisenhauer suffered from severe PTSD that was exacerbated by alcohol and anti-anxiety medications.
read more here

Friday, August 7, 2015

City Cleared After Vancouver Police Shot Nikkolas Lookabill

City Cleared in Fatal Police Shooting
Courthouse News
By NICK MCCANN
August 6, 2015

TACOMA, Wash. (CN) - Vancouver, Wash., cannot be sued for its police officers shooting to death an Iraq war veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder, a federal judge ruled.

Vancouver police shot Nikkolas Lookabill to death on Sept. 7, 2010 after he refused to drop a handgun. The 22-year old veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom was acting incoherently when police responded to a 3:30 a.m. call from people who were disturbed by his behavior, U.S. District Judge Robert Bryan wrote in his Aug. 3 dismissal on summary judgment.

After receiving the call saying that Lookabill was "not really coherent," officers said they found him as he was "screaming obscenities, was very agitated, and not compliant."

Lookabill told the officers to take the gun from him after ordered him to lie on the ground, Bryan wrote in his summary.

"I'm going to countdown from 30 and then if you don't come take the gun from me, I'm going to start smashing my head into the sidewalk," Lookabill told police, according to witness testimony.

The officers and witnesses said Lookabill repeatedly reached toward his waistband, and the officers shot him 13 times. He died at the scene.

Lookabill's stepfather Frank Wescom Jr. and half-brother Gage Wescom sued the city and the police officers, and filed an amended complaint in August 2013.

The city and police claimed the Wescoms did not have standing to sue because, among other things, there is no authorized personal representative to pursue their claims. They claimed that a former step-parent and half-sibling do not have due process liberty interest in their relationship with an adult child or half-sibling.

Bryan dismissed most of the claims in October 2013, but preserved a claim against Vancouver under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
read more here

Original post
22 year old National Guard Soldier, back from Iraq, killed by Vancouver police It never gets easier to post stories like this. An Iraq veteran is dead at the age of 22. He survived Iraq but couldn't survive back home. Just doesn't make much sense. I'm sure the police officers are having a hard time with his too.
Man killed by Vancouver police was Iraq vet
The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Sep 9, 2010 5:41:45 EDT

VANCOUVER, Wash. — A 22-year-old man fatally shot by Vancouver police was an Oregon Army National Guard soldier who served 12 months in Iraq, a National Guard spokesman confirms.

Spc. Nikkolas W. Lookabill deployed in May 2009 as a member of the 41st Infantry Brigade after joining the guard in 2008, Guard spokesman Capt. Stephen Bomar said. Lookabill returned in May.

Guard officials confirmed Lookabill's military status Wednesday after the man was identified by Vancouver police.

Police said three officers fired at the Vancouver man early Tuesday morning after they responded to a report of a man walking in a neighborhood, armed with a handgun. Police spokeswoman Kim Kapp said the man was "engaging in threatening activity" and refusing police commands to drop the gun when he was shot.

In Memory of
SPC Nikkolas Wren Kenneth Lookabill
February 29, 1988 - September 7, 2010
Obituary
SPC Nikkolas Wren Kenneth Lookabill of Vancouver WA, was killed on September 7, 2010 at the young age of 22 years. He was a native of Vancouver, born on February 29, 1988. He was a good man, caring and devoted to every life he touched. Nikkolas was a wonderful son, brother, grandson, nephew, cousin, friend and American soldier. He is survived by his mother, Denise R. Wescom; his dad and step-mom: Frank(Butch) L. Wescom Jr. and Wendi L. Wescom; his brothers: Gage, Dyllon, and Eli; and his sisters Talia and Lacey, all of Vancouver WA. He is also survived by loving grandparents, aunts and uncles, cousins and comrades. His family and friends meant the world to him, and it showed in so many ways.

He loved life, he loved to smile and put smiles on all of the faces around him. He was a novice writer, and his work was fabulous.

Nikk enlisted into the Oregon Army National Guard on October 25,2007. He was a soldier in B Troop, 1st Squadron 82nd Cavalry Regiment, 41st Infantry Brigade Combat Team. He served in the National Guard until he was called to active duty for Operation Iraqi Freedom.

He deployed on July 8, 2009 to Baghdad, Iraq. He served our country valiantly as a Cavalry Scout. He was recognized for exemplary service, was awarded for excellence, and received the Army Commendation Medal for exceptionally meritorious service to the United States of America. He was dedicated and performed his duties until April 15, 2010, when he was honorably discharged from active duty.

He was a good man, a young man, who's life ended tragically. He will be missed immensely. The family will be holding a private gathering, and express heartfelt gratitude to all of their friends for their support. There has been a donation account set up to help the family at this difficult time. Donations can be made at any US Bank into the Nikkolas W. Lookabill Donation account.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Decorated Disabled Veteran Shot on 4th of July By Police

Shot on the Fourth of July, Veteran Says 
Courthouse News Service
By LORRAINE BAILEY
Monday, July 06, 2015
Smith says he was hit five times in his chest, stomach, arm and legs, and grazed by two bullets on his face and neck.
CHICAGO (CN) - A decorated veteran was drinking a beer on the street last July 4 when Chicago police chased and shot him five times, he claims in Federal Court.

Levail Smith says he fought in Operation Desert Storm with the U.S. Marine Corps, service that earned him three Bronze Stars, a Combat Action Ribbon, a Navy Unit Commendation, the National Defense Services Medal, the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon, the Kuwait Liberation Medal (Saudi Arabia) and the Kuwait Liberation Medal (Kuwait).

That tour also left Smith with post-traumatic stress disorder, however, and he says qualifies as fully disabled.

Smith was doing his laundry in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood at approximately 11:30 a.m. on July 4, 2014, when he stepped outside and joined a group of men standing on the sidewalk, according to a federal complaint Smith filed last week.

He says one of the men handed him a can of beer, and that an unmarked police car immediately descended on him after he took a sip.

Seeing Officer Tim Manning place his hand on his gun after getting out of the car, Smith says the threatening gesture triggered his PTSD, causing him to fear for his life and run.
read more here

Monday, July 6, 2015

Albuquerque Police Sued After Vietnam Veteran Shot 9 Times

Sister sues city over APD killing of mentally ill veteran 
Albuquerque Journal
By Scott Sandlin Journal Staff Writer
PUBLISHED: Monday, July 6, 2015
Wood was shot nine times, in the chest, abdomen, penis, lower back, buttock and left arm.

The lack of mental health services and police trained to deal with mentally ill people is a focus of a new lawsuit filed against the city over a 2013 fatal police shooting of a Vietnam veteran who talked to himself and heard voices.

The lawsuit claims Albuquerque Police Department and the city failed to make reasonable accommodations to ensure safe treatment and transportation under the Americans with Disabilities Act in the July 5, 2013, shooting of Vietnam veteran Vincent Wood, 66, who had diagnoses of mental illnesses. It also alleges multiple civil rights violations.

Wood, who served in the Army during the Vietnam war, suffered from psychosis, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and other mental health conditions stemming from his military service, the lawsuit says.

The complaint was filed in 2nd Judicial District Court by attorney Frances Carpenter on behalf of Wood’s sister, Hope Irvin, and moved last week to U.S. District Court by the City of Albuquerque, a named defendant along with Albuquerque Police Department officers Katherine Wright and Jeffrey Bludworth.
read more here

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Las Vegas Police Look For New Training After Gulf War Veteran Was Killed

Las Vegas a test to reduce police shootings 
Mohave Daily News
June 21, 2015
“When you have the trainers actually mocking the training, how seriously are the trainees going to take it?” said Andre Lagomarsino, a lawyer for the family of Trevon Cole, killed by an officer.

LAS VEGAS (AP) — By 2 a.m., nearly five hours had ticked by since Stanley Gibson’s last call. “I want to come home,” the 43-year-old Gulf War veteran told his wife, Rondha, his voice edged by post-traumatic stress disorder.

But Rondha Gibson did not know where to find him until a white Cadillac, bathed in spotlights, filled her television screen. “Local man shot by Metro police,” a headline announced.

“I think that’s my husband you guys killed,” she recalled telling the dispatcher who answered her 911 call.

On that night in 2011, local leaders had just started acknowledging two decades of shootings by Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department officers. But Gibson’s death was a flash point.

Las Vegas, now the first department in the country to complete a “collaborative” Justice Department review, has rewritten its use-of-force rules and ramped up training to de-escalate tense encounters.

Some criticized it as not enough. But shootings by officers, which peaked at 25 in 2010, declined to 13 in 2013 and 16 last year. Through mid-June, Metro officers shot three people, killing one. Even critics credit the decrease at least partly to new training.
Policing experts say training often falls short.

A 2008 survey of more than 300 departments found one-third limited deadly-force training to requalifying in shooting skills, without focusing on judgment or tactics. More than three-fourths did not share findings from police shooting investigations with trainers.
read more here

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Marine Iraq Veteran Ended Up Dead After Call For Help

Claim details why family faults Wichita police in Marine veteran’s shooting death 
The Wichita Eagle
BY TIM POTTER
June 16, 2015
Standing in her front yard, Beverly Allen holds a picture of her son, Icarus Randolph, while surround by her daughters Ida Allen, left, Elisa Allen and Briana Alford. All four were witnesses when Icarus Randolph was shot and killed by a Wichita police officer on July 4, 2014.
Travis Heying The Wichita Eagle
Icarus Randolph – a Marine veteran who suffered from PTSD after serving in Iraq – became a casualty of Wichita police officers who ignored their department’s policy on helping mentally ill people, Randolph’s family alleges in a legal claim against the city.

The city on Tuesday released to The Eagle a copy of the full claim document, which demands $5 million and says that a Wichita police officer needlessly and wrongly shot and killed the 26-year-old in his mother’s front yard on July the Fourth as his family pleaded for help and watched in horror. Family members also were in the line of fire, the claim says.

The claim faults the actions of one officer in particular, saying that although he had training on dealing with the mentally ill, he violated the policy by escalating the situation. He argued with family members within earshot of Randolph, the claim says. Under the policy, the Randolph family should have been removed from the front yard to help de-escalate the situation and to protect them “if a situation goes badly,” the claim says.

The officer also worsened the situation and further violated the policy by stepping toward Randolph as he advanced and by failing to give himself room to withdraw, the family alleges. Wakarusa lawyer Lee Barnett filed the claim on behalf of the family on June 2. A claim is a required step before a lawsuit can be filed.
read more here
Linked from RawStory

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Call of Help Leaves PTSD Veteran Dead in Kansas

No charges planned against officers in man’s shooting death
By - Associated Press
Saturday, June 13, 2015

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - No charges will be filed over the shooting death of a man accused of lunging at a Wichita police officer with a knife, authorities say.

In announcing the decision Friday, Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett also released his full report into the July 4 shooting of Icarus Randolph, saying he was seeking to introduce more transparency to his office.

“The conclusion in this case is that the police officer was placed in a situation where he objectively and reasonably felt he needed to defend himself against the advance of someone who was not responding to calls . either from the officer or from family,” Bennett said.

The report said relatives became concerned because Randolph, a veteran who suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, wasn’t interacting with them.

Family members said they called mental health associations for help and were advised to call 911. The family wanted Randolph to be taken to a local mental health treatment center.
read more here

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Marine Survived Afghanistan and 177 Police Bullets in Texas

Despite attempt at ‘suicide by cop,’ only one of 177 police bullets hit Marine veteran 
MySanAntonio
BY ZEKE MACCORMACK
JUNE 4, 2015
A jury Thursday sentenced him to 10 years in prison despite testimony from three men who served with him in Afghanistan that he deserved a second chance. Valdez himself took the stand, apologized to police and his family and said he had intended to hurt nobody but himself.
BOERNE — A troubled war vet who fired shots during a confrontation with police while robbing a Fredericksburg convenience store — he later called it an attempted suicide by cop — admitted guilt and is asking a jury here to assess his punishment.

Officers fired 177 bullets during the melee, but Victor A. Valdez, 25, escaped the Dec. 18, 2013 incident with a minor buttock wound, according to testimony this week.

Police unleashed the firepower when Valdez, a former Marine lance corporal with post traumatic stress disorder from his service in Afghanistan, fired through the store’s front window after more than two hours of telephone negotiations broke down. read more here

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Thug Fuss and Twisted Attention

After Baltimore riots, some leaders slam 'thug' as the new n-word
By Josh Levs, CNN, April 29, 2015
(CNN)A term used by President Barack Obama and Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake to characterize rioters has given new life to a debate over the word "thug."

"Of course it's not the right word, to call our children 'thugs,'" Baltimore City Councilman Carl Stokes told CNN's "Erin Burnett OutFront." "These are children who have been set aside, marginalized, who have not been engaged by us. No, we don't have to call them thugs."

"Just call them n-----s. Just call them n-----s," he said. "No, we don't have to call them by names such as that."

The Rev. Jamal Bryant drew the same comparison Wednesday morning on CNN. The President and the mayor are wrong, he said. "These are not thugs, these are upset and frustrated children."

This is what the word actually means.
Thug
noun
1. a cruel or vicious ruffian, robber, or murderer.
2.(sometimes initial capital letter) one of a former group of professional robbers and murderers in India who strangled their victims.

Give me a break! If Stokes is offended by this word, then he needs to actually take a step back and consider who it was being directed at.

The right to peacefully protest has been defend across the country over and over again but what people take issue with is when those protests are used to commit criminal acts, like robbery and setting fires topped off with attacking police officers.

Destroying businesses and private property is not part of what most folks were trying to do, yet to others it was an opportunity to act like a bunch of thugs. The word is not used to describe color or even as an insult to the protestors. Deal with it!

If Strokes believes children were being called thugs, then he should think about what some of them were doing at the time then rethink how all the rioters actually did more damage to those children than this word ever could.

What kind of a message does committing crimes send? What kind of a message does it send when only some lives matter?

This isn't about all police officers committing crimes, but has always been about a few doing unspeakable acts. No one seems to want to talk about the 100 good cops being injured just doing their jobs, showing up for work.
Nearly 100 Officers Injured Since Monday: Baltimore Police
Nearly 100 officers have been hurt since violence broke out in the city on Monday, Baltimore Police said.

Capt. Eric Kowalczyk said Thursday afternoon that more than 40 officers required some sort of treatment at the hospital.

Protesters have been throwing bricks, bottles and other items at officers trying to contain demonstrations after the death of Freddie Gray, a black man who suffered critical injuries while he was in police custody.

But why talk about the fact that most of those officers are good and ashamed of the few bad ones giving all of them a bad reputation?

That article had "protestors" instead of thugs. Most of the people protesting should take offense with that because most of them were there to publicly show their outrage peacefully. That word should have been replaced with "thugs" or criminals.

Folks can twist and manipulate whatever they want and they seem to get all the attention of the reporters on TV yet there is so much more going on in this country not getting any attention at all.

Does Strokes know about veterans with PTSD in crisis being killed by police officers and SWAT Teams all over the country because they are not getting the help they need? These are some of their stories.
U.S. Air Force dress blue uniform, Francis “Frank” Lamantia Spivey stood with an assault rifle pushed up to his chin just after midnight Feb. 25.

Glendale police fatally shot Joe Tassinari in March 2015, Vietnam veteran.

William Dean Poole, GASTON COUNTY — A veteran was shot and killed by police Monday after he fired his weapon at them, Gaston County authorities said.

Brandon Lawrence, "as observed by officers just inside his residence holding a 23-inch machete"

Brian Babb, a 49-year-old former captain in the Oregon Army National Guard

There was only one protest.
Anthony Hill, a 27-year-old US air force veteran, was shot dead on 9 March at his apartment complex outside Atlanta.

The stories above are only a few of the reports from across the country that I found. How many more are there? Do they merit protests? Why not? They were in crisis because of PTSD and where they were sent!

They risked their lives serving this country but over and over again they didn't get the help the rest of us thought they would get.

The politicians got to say whatever they wanted over and over again yet over and over again we bury veterans. For Heaven's sake! They survived combat but couldn't survived home?

These veterans knew how to use weapons yet a tiny fraction of officers are hit by them before they fired the fatal shot. Depending on what part of the country the story ends differently a lot of the time. 

Some of them are taken to get help after facing off with SWAT Teams and sometimes their bodies are put into bags. Why does this happen? It isn't about good cops vs bad ones but more about how they were trained and it is circumstance by circumstance. We may never know because it seems no one cares to find out what makes the difference.

No one care because we have to spend time on folks like Strokes trying to cause outrage over something that isn't even relevant to what happened.

Friday, May 1, 2015

Police Officers Cleared After Killing Veteran

UPDATE
We’ll do all we can to avoid another vet tragedy

DA rules fatal shooting of Army vet was justified 
By The Register-Guard
MAY 1, 2015

Lane County District Attorney Alex Gardner announced today that the officer-involved shooting of Brian Babb was justified under Oregon law.

Babb, 49, a former Oregon Army National Guard captain who family members said suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, was shot and killed by Eugene police officer Will Stutesman on March 30 after police say he pointed a rifle at the officer from the home’s doorway.

Police Chief Pete Kerns had said previously that the officer — who was inside of an armored vehicle and standing up through a roof hatch — was 100 to 200 feet away at the time of the shooting.

After Stutesman shot Babb, officers entered the residence.

According to the district attorney’s announcement today, the rifle Babb was holding was determined to be unloaded and the ammunition was sitting on a nearby dining room table next to Babb’s personal effects.

Babb’s therapist had called Eugene police to Babb’s West Eugene home and reported that he was suicidal and fired a handgun inside his home.
read more here

Eugene Oregon Police Reach Out After Suicidal Veteran Killed by Officers

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Eugene Oregon Police Reach Out After Suicidal Veteran Killed by Officers

Eugene police reach out to vets
The chief is seeking their help with training after an officer fatally shot a veteran in crisis
The Register Guard
By Christian Hill
The Register-Guard
APRIL 30, 2015
“In the long run,” Kerns concluded, “our goal is that our department will have an expertise in the unique skills of working with veterans that will be ideal to the needs of our community.”

The Eugene Police Department is reaching out to veterans and enlisting their help to train officers in the wake of the March 30 fatal shooting of a war veteran in crisis.

Police Chief Pete Kerns outlined those and other steps he said his department is taking in an email he sent out before the publication in Wednesday’s Register-Guard of a lengthy opinion essay by Becky Higgins, the veteran’s therapist . The essay was highly critical of the police response.

Higgins was on the phone with her client for about 45 minutes before he was killed.

An as-yet-unidentified officer shot and killed Brian Babb, a 49-year-old former captain in the Oregon Army National Guard, after Higgins called police to Babb’s west Eugene home because he was suicidal and told Higgins he had fired a gun in his home.

Kerns has said the officer fired after Babb, who had moved to the doorway, pointed a rifle at the officer.

Higgins wrote in her op-ed essay that she felt “used by the police” and that officers approached the situation as if Babb “was an enemy combatant, instead of a wounded military officer.”

Higgins questioned the police department’s show of force and asked why officers were in a hurry when Babb appeared to her to be calming down. Engaging a traumatized combat veteran with startling commands from a bullhorn, she said, “begs common sense.”
read more here

Killing of suicidal veteran likely avoidable
The Register Guard
By Becky Higgins
For The Register-Guard
APRIL 29, 2015

Monday, April 27, marked a month since Brian Babb was killed at his home by Eugene police. The Interagency Deadly Use of Force Investigation Team (IDFIT) has given its report on the incident to Lane County District Attorney Alex Gardner, who will determine whether the shooting was justified. Regardless of that decision, the shooting likely could have been avoided.

I was Brian’s therapist. I was on the phone with him until minutes before he was shot dead in the doorway of his home. In this column, I can share the information from the 911 call, which is a public record, and I can share my opinions. Everything else about Babb as my client is privileged, even after his death.

I called 911 on March 30 from my cellphone, reporting that I was a therapist in private practice, I had a client on my office phone who was suicidal, he was a combat veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder and a traumatic brain injury (TBI), he had a handgun, and he was not willing to take the clip out of the gun or the round out of the chamber. The 911 operator told me to place my cellphone next to me while I talked with my client on my office landline. The recording, which picked up only my end of the conversation, lasted about 45 minutes. The 911 operator could hear me; I could hear her.
read more here

Wanda McBride Hollaway 3 weeks ago
Oh my son. I never knew pain until now. When you were four, you told me that when you grew up, you were going to marry me and take care of me. I hugged you and told you that would be great, but mommy would take care of you too. I have failed horribly. The only thing I can do now, is to make every effort to change prodigal on the VA RESPONSE to suicidal veterans. A trained team from the VA should be dispatched - not police! I will miss you every day of my life and look forward to our reunion in heaven. You are my heart, son.

Hundreds attend memorial for slain veteran

Eugene man killed by police was an Army veteran

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Vietnam Veteran Took Stand Against Baltimore Rioters

Vietnam Veteran took stand against Baltimore rioters and bravo for him. When he said why he did it, he was expressing what a lot of other people feel.

The truth is, the rioters respect nothing but use everything they can to pretend what they are doing has any value at all. It doesn't. They used the death of Freddie Gray to the point where I actually had to look up his name because I couldn't remember it.  It solved nothing when they became the story.

His family asked protestors to respect their grief just for one day, but they ignored it. No one knows what happened right now but the one thing everyone should know is the entire police force is not to blame even though it seems as if a few are responsible.

They attacked police officers even though what was done to Gray was not done by all of them, but that didn't matter. It didn't matter that they were destroying businesses and neighborhood property. Nothing mattered.

It never seems to matter that veterans are killed by police officers everyday all over the country because they do not get the help they need to come home and live in peace. Depending on where they live, some officers are trained properly and the veteran is taken to get help.  In other parts of the country, they are shot quickly. There are hardly no protests at all for them.

Well, one veteran decided he was going to do something about it and he took a stand against the corrupters of Gray's family in pain. Even London took notice.
Baltimore riots: Video shows 'hero' Vietnam vet who told looters to go home and study
London Evening Standard
RAMZY ALWAKEEL
Published: 28 April 2015

Veteran: Robert Valentine tells CNN's Joe Johns why he has confronted rioters
(Picture: CNN/YouTube)

A Vietnam veteran who stood up to rioters in Baltimore has been branded a hero.

Robert Valentine was interviewed by CNN after he was spotted confronting rioters in the street after a wave of violence broke out following the death of a black man who was in police custody in the US city.

The war veteran astonished news reporters when he delivered a poignant message on camera denouncing rioters.

Speaking to CNN reporter Joe Johns, he said: "I did 30 years, came out Master Sergeant. I've seen more than all this. I've been through the riots already."
read more here

Veteran stands up against rioters
Anderson Cooper 360 | Source: CNN
Added on 9:55 PM ET, Mon April 27, 2015
There was a lot of folks showing great courage and those were the folks showing up to do their jobs in spite of the criminals destroying their city instead of working to make it a better place to live. Protesting peacefully is one thing but this, this inflicted more pain on more people.