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Tag: Colorado Springs Fire Department

  • Colorado law enforcement report few impacts to 911, emergency services amid global technology outage

    Colorado law enforcement report few impacts to 911, emergency services amid global technology outage

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    DENVER — Numerous police departments across the United States have reported that the worldwide technology outage affected their 911 service Friday morning, according to Scripps News.

    The Colorado Springs 911 Emergency Communications Center was one of them. The Colorado Springs Fire Department reported the impacts on the social media site X, saying in part:

    “It’s important to emphasize CSFD is continuing to respond to all emergencies. 9-1-1 phone lines and department radios are NOT affected and regular patrols remain active in the city. We want to remind community members to still call 9-1-1 for any life-threatening situation or crime in progress. Drivers involved in any serious traffic accidents involving death or serious injuries requiring medical attention, or if alcohol or impairment is suspected, should still call 9-1-1. However, if all drivers are present with a valid driver’s license, vehicle registration, and insurance information and there is no property damage or injury, you can report the accident within 72 hours online.”

    Callers were also able to reach Denver 911 and the non-emergency line despite the global technology outage, according to the Denver Department of Public Safety.

    “Denver 9-1-1 was back to full operations at 6:10 a.m. this morning, and all systems are functioning normally at this time,” the Denver Department of Public Safety said.

    Aurora police said the department experienced some effects.

    “Our CAD dispatch system [computer-aided dispatch] went down about 10:30 p.m. and we had to transition to manual dispatch. CAD was restored about 2 a.m. and we have been operating normally since,” Aurora police said Friday morning.

    But 911 phone lines were unaffected by the outage, Aurora police told Denver7.

    Colorado State Patrol told Denver7 there were some impacts on dispatch, but none on emergency services. Phones were still working and CSP did not any delays in response times.

    Similarly, the Denver Police Department said the outage did not impact fundamental safety services, such as the ability for officers to respond to calls. However, DPD sent Denver7 a statement that said in part:

    “The primary impact to DPD patrol operations was that officers were unable to use the laptop terminals in patrol vehicles, and those systems have been restored. During that time, reports that are typically created by officers and submitted electronically were being done as paper reports. The Department is working to restore supporting systems that currently remain offline.”

    On the other hand, the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office told Denver7 there were no impacts as of 5:50 a.m. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office and the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office also said they were also unaware of any issues.

    Cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike said, the issue believed to be behind the outage was not a security incident or cyberattack — and that a fix was on the way. The company said the problem occurred when it deployed a faulty update to computers running Microsoft Windows.

    U.S./World

    Widespread technology outage disruptions felt around the world

    5:00 AM, Jul 19, 2024

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    Katie Parkins

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  • Family of Colorado Springs man who died while in custody of mental health team files wrongful death lawsuit

    Family of Colorado Springs man who died while in custody of mental health team files wrongful death lawsuit

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    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The family of an unarmed Colorado man who died while in the custody of a Colorado Springs Police Department mental health team in 2022 has filed a wrongful death suit against a police officer and fire department paramedic, civil rights attorneys representing the family announced Tuesday.

    The lawsuit names Sean Reed, a Colorado Springs police officer; and Nick Fisher, a Colorado Springs Fire Department paramedic, as the defendants in the suit.

    Kevin Dizmang, 63, stopped breathing as an officer and paramedic working as part of the city’s Critical Response Team (CRT) pulled him out of traffic and restrained him in November of 2022. Attempts to resuscitate Dizmang were unsuccessful. He was pronounced dead at Penrose Hospital. A coroner’s report would later classify Dizmang’s death as a homicide.

    A spokesman for the 4th Judicial District Attorney’s Office told News 5 in February of 2022 that the Deadly Force Investigation Team reviewed the incident and that the actions of the police officer and paramedic were reasonable.

    But questions surrounding his death arose when lawyers for the family released body-worn camera video which showed how the events of that night unfolded.

    In the video, Reed is repeatedly heard ordering Dizmang to put his hands behind his back while in the street, as others try to stop cars, and resisting attempts by the officer to put handcuffs on him. He then is taken to the ground with the help of another person in a red jacket — identified by family lawyer Harry Daniels as Fischer, the team’s paramedic.

    Once he is fully cuffed, Reed instructs Fischer to help him roll Dizmang onto his side.

    Jesse Sharp, a manager at the mobile home park where Dizmang lived, is heard in the video saying, “Kev, breathe for me Papa, Kev.”

    Sharp later explained to Reed that he and Justin Miller saw Dizmang walking into traffic on Mount View Lane and tried to help him.

    It’s hard to see what is happening but, with the person in red holding his arm around the upper part of Dizmang’s body as he lies face down, Dizmang soon stops moving. After he is turned face up, others around him call on Dizmang to talk to them but there is no response.

    Reed is then seen using his radio to call for an ambulance. As the group waited he asked Fischer, “Is he okay?”

    Fischer’s answer is difficult to hear because the police radio interrupts his reply. “He’s not aspirating,” he appears to say.

    Daniels noted that no one made any effort to try to revive Dizmang at that point. He also faulted the officer for treating the call like a crime scene from the start, rather than like a mental health crisis.

    The family’s attorney told News 5 that Dizmang’s daughter hired him and Bakari Sellers to represent their interests in the case. He believes the Critical Response Team should help people in mental distress and not restrain them.

    Wrongful Death lawsuit filed against local police officer & paramedic

    “You can see him, Mr. Dizmang’s neck is in the armpits of the officer while he’s applying pressure. Not the officer, but this paramedic, who is not trained by any capacity to engage in any such behavior,” Daniels said.

    The coroner’s report would go into detail about what caused the 63-year-old to die.

    “It is my opinion that Kevin Dizmang, a 63-year-old white male, died as a result of cardiopulmonary arrest in the setting of physical restraint, acute methamphetamine intoxication, COPD and asthma, cardiomegaly, diaphragmatic paralysis, and obesity,” the report states.

    A second body cam video shows moments inside Penrose Hospital.

    The video is blurred, but Fischer can be heard describing the tackle he performed on Dizmang to others.

    “My first time taking somebody down with this job,” he said. “And I was like, ‘I don’t know what I’m supposed to do.’ Another clinician told me, she’s like, ‘Go help him restrain him.’ I go to pull drugs out, and she’s like, ‘No, go help him,’ and I was like, ‘Oop high school football,” he said, as other men in the video can be heard laughing.

    “Good form homie,” a voice can be heard telling Fischer.

    Daniels urged the community not to let this video dehumanize Dizmang.

    “This is a family,” he said. “This is a father, a grandfather who was loved dearly by his family, by his grandchildren, and despite the fact that he came across some demons and had his issues, that does not negate the value of his life.”

    If you would like to read the lawsuit for yourself you can do so here.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Andy Koen

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