Report finds link between mental health, and police-involved shootings

DETROIT (AP) - Mental illness was a factor in many law enforcement conflicts in Michigan that resulted in the deaths of police officers or civilians in recent years, according to a review by a news organization.

MLive.com reviewed police reports, court records and newspaper archives to find that 33 of the 87 people killed by police in Michigan in that time had signs or a history of mental illness. MLive.com's review of the 43 police officers who were slain in the past two decades found that 13 were killed by people who showed signs of mental illness.

Many of the deaths could have been prevented with better mental-health treatment, according to mental-health advocates and law-enforcement officials.

Police officials said they're working to better train officers to defuse tense situations. Police in Michigan and across the U.S. are more often using crisis intervention teams, which pair law enforcement with mental-health professionals.

Sgt. Matt Warzywak teaches the Michigan State Police Training Division's "Managing the Mental Health Crisis: A Patrol Response" course, which teaches new recruits how to assess mental illness and how to interact with individuals.

Warzywak, a 14-year state police veteran, said there's been a shift to how law enforcement approaches mental illness. He said he was trained to take action during situations, but the focus now is to slow down when it's safe.

"So what we're teaching now is take more time, use your verbal skills to try and de-escalate the situation, rather than just rushing in and taking action," Warzywak said.

Published: Tue, Jan 15, 2019