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Tag: taser

  • Wake County Sheriff’s Office reintroduces Tasers amid rising ‘combative’ incidents

    Deputies with the Wake County Sheriff’s Office will soon
    have Tasers on their hips again.

    The office’s agreement with taser manufacturer Axon started
    this month.

    Sheriff Willie Rowe said the option to use a taser allows deputies
    to contain a situation without direct contact.

    “When you start rassling with people and you’re trying to
    restrain them, that increases the risk of injury to staff or the arrestee,” he
    said.

    According to county documents, the 200 new Taser 10s come
    with a roughly $1.4 million price tag, including tax. The contract with Axon started on Nov. 1, 2025. It will run through Oct. 31, 2030.

    The agency phased
    out
     Tasers in 2019 under previous Sheriff Gerald Baker.

    At the time, the sheriff’s office adjusted its use-of-force
    policy, citing liability concerns. The decision was based on a 4th U.S. Circuit
    Court of Appeals ruling that Taser use may be seen as unconstitutionally
    excessive force in some circumstances.

    WRAL News asked Rowe whether he still has
    concerns about liability.

    “Liability will always exist,” Rowe said. “The focus is to make sure that
    we have the proper training … [and] that we’re deploying the latest, updated
    devices.”

    Attorney Dawn Blagrove is the executive director of
    Emancipate NC, a nonprofit focused on ending structural racism and mass
    incarceration. Blagrove says adding Tasers back as an option for deputies is “beneficial.”

    “Any opportunity that we have to minimize that physical
    touch between the officers and the community … I think that is better,” she
    said. “I think these Tasers can be a good way to prevent harm to the officers
    and to the community at large.”

    Rowe said he’s seen an uptick in “combative reactions” from
    people as deputies are trying to arrest them.

    “It’s difficult to speak to the state of mind of people.
    However, we have seen an increase of impaired individuals that we deal with,”
    he explained, when asked why he thought deputies were dealing with more
    combative people. “Anytime a person is impaired – whether it’s alcohol or drugs
    – that can contribute to people being aggressive. There’s been an uptick of
    people suffering from mental illness.”

    Data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation supports Rowe’s
    observations.

    “The past decade shows the rate of non-fatal assaults
    against law enforcement officers has been increasing since 2021,” according to an
    FBI
    special report
    .

    It also notes 2024 as having the highest officer assault
    rate since 2015, at 13.5 assaults per 100 officers.

    In North Carolina, about 3,644 law enforcement officers were
    assaulted on the job in 2024, according to statistics from the FBI. In
    most cases, officers were responding to disturbance calls, like family quarrels
    or bar fights. About 19% of the time, they were trying to arrest someone. About
    14% of the time, officers were working with an inmate.

    Axon advertises the Taser 10s as “less-lethal.” The company
    says the Taser 10s are safer, more accurate and have features, like bright
    lights and loud noises to allow the user to de-escalate before actually using the
    device.

    “Studies and findings have shown that providing proper
    training on (ECWs) promotes effective de-escalation, reduces overall use-of force
    incidents, and supports officer safety,” according to county documents.

    The documents also say reintroduced technology will help in
    the county’s goal to reduce violent crime.

    Blagrove said the technology will need to be paired with quality
    training.

    “We know that Tasers can be deadly,” she said. “I would love
    to see a stronger emphasis on diffusing situations without the need for force.
    However, when force is necessary, we always want to see as many steps as
    possible that are available to the officers before lethal force.”

    The sheriff said deputies assigned to patrol will receive
    the Tasers first. Between delivery and training, the sheriff said it will take
    anywhere from six to nine months to fully implement the Tasers.

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  • Naked man running around neighborhood screaming dies after being tased, Texas cops say

    Naked man running around neighborhood screaming dies after being tased, Texas cops say

    A Texas man died after police say they responded to an exposure call and ultimately tased the man.

    A Texas man died after police say they responded to an exposure call and ultimately tased the man.

    Screengrab from Houston Police Department’s video on Facebook

    A Texas man died after police say they responded to an exposure call and ultimately tased him.

    Just after 7 a.m. April 28, police responded to a southeast Houston neighborhood after they were called about a naked man running around in the street, Houston Police Assistant Chief Wyatt Martin said at a news conference streamed on Facebook.

    People in the area reported they could hear the man screaming. When officers arrived, they found the man inside a back enclosed porch of a home in the neighborhood.

    Martin said police confronted the man and ordered him to come out, but he was uncooperative. The officers backed off and called for backup because the man was in an “agitated state”, Martin said.

    When fire crews and backup units arrived, police tried to take the man into custody, Martin said.

    “He fought with the officers and was eventually tased,” Martin said.

    The man, whose identity has not been released, was placed into handcuffs, and about a minute later he became unresponsive, police said.

    Paramedics were already on the scene and treated the man but were not able to revive him, police said. He was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    “We use tasers as a less lethal weapon quite often, most of the time people have no adverse effects. This gentleman, we do know for certain was on a narcotic, and that very likely, given what he was on, could have contributed,” Martin said.

    Martin said the man was tased at least one time after wrestling with officers. He said a full investigation into the man’s death will be done.

    A cause of death has not yet been determined.

    Jennifer Rodriguez is a McClatchy National Real-Time reporter covering the Central and Midwest regions. She joined McClatchy in 2023 after covering local news in Youngstown, Ohio, for over six years. Jennifer has made several achievements in her journalism career, including receiving the Robert R. Hare Award in English, the Emerging Leader Justice and Equality Award, the Regional Edward R. Murrow Award and the Distinguished Hispanic Ohioan Award.

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  • Aspiring actor, homeless in L.A., was fatally shot by CHP officer on 105 Freeway

    Aspiring actor, homeless in L.A., was fatally shot by CHP officer on 105 Freeway

    Jesse Dominguez had the same aspirations many in Los Angeles do: to be an actor.

    And he shared the same struggles too: substance use issues, a serious mental health disorder and homelessness.

    On Sunday afternoon, while in what his family said must have been a mental health episode or drug-fueled crisis, Dominguez was shot and killed by a California Highway Patrol officer following a struggle on the 105 Freeway in Watts near the sober living facility where he lived.

    CHP officials said that during the altercation, Dominguez “was able to access a Taser” and used it against the officer.

    “In fear for his safety, the officer fired his service weapon, striking the pedestrian,” the CHP said in a statement.

    His family, however, sees the incident differently.

    “I’ve pretty much ‘backed the blue’ in a lot of circumstances,” Akasha Dominguez, the man’s stepmother, said referring to a slogan about supporting police. “There have been issues where [police] used excessive force. But I’ve never been on the other end. Now I have a completely different stance. This is absolutely police brutality.”

    His family said that Dominguez did carry a Taser for protection after being threatened by others living at the facility where he was staying.

    Akasha Dominguez and other family members were in shock Tuesday after learning that Dominguez had been killed. Graphic video appeared to show the encounter leading up to the shooting, during which Dominguez and a CHP officer wrestle on the pavement of the closed freeway before the officer stands and repeatedly shoots Dominguez.

    The end of his life was unfathomable to Dominguez’s family members, who knew the 33-year-old as a troubled man who was a “softie” and wanted more than anything to be an actor, though he never got any roles.

    Dominguez struggled with bipolar disorder as well as substance use disorder, according to his father, Jesse Dominguez. He wanted to be an actor or a singer, but bounced around from job to job, mostly waiting tables. While family had tried to help the younger Dominguez, who was homeless, and offered him places to live, he wanted to make it on his own, his father said.

    His failure to make it as an actor depressed him, family said.

    “We just feel terrible that L.A. just robbed him. The Hollywood scene sucked him in to wanting to be that persona. No matter how hard we tried to get him to do other jobs or seek formal education, that’s what he wanted to do. We weren’t going to crush his dreams,” Dominguez’s father said.

    The 55-year-old former Marine told The Times that he could not bring himself to watch the bystander video that appears to show the last moments of his son’s life. But his wife and daughter have.

    The family is grappling with the same questions that use-of-force experts say will become the focus of the investigation into the shooting by the officer, who has not been identified.

    “I don’t know why the officer thought to engage. If someone is walking on the freeway, something is not right. They’re either in mental health crisis or something else is happening,” Akasha Dominguez said. “He was not trying to hurt anybody. Why did he have to use that type of force? After [the officer] had already discharged his firearm once, why did he stand up and then do it again and again and again?”

    The questions Dominguez’s stepmother asked will likely be addressed in the California Department of Justice’s investigation into the deadly shooting.

    The DOJ investigates police shootings in which an unarmed civilian is killed.

    Law enforcement experts interviewed Monday by The Times were divided.

    Travis Norton, a law enforcement officer who runs the California Assn. of Tactical Officers After Action Review, said video is a limited way to understand a police shooting.

    “It is hard to diagnose without knowing what the officer saw, experienced and interpreted was happening,” Norton said. “All I see is a very short scuffle. I see the suspect point something that appears to look like some sort of weapon. … From the video, without knowing anything else about it, the use of deadly force appears appropriate.”

    But other experts said the use of force raises many questions.

    Ed Obayashi, a police shootings expert who investigates the incidents for numerous law enforcement agencies in California, said investigators will immediately ask the officer why he was engaging with the person without a partner or backup in the immediate vicinity.

    “Why did you shoot him while he was on the ground?” Obayashi said investigators will ask. “You separated yourself from the individual; why was he still a threat to you?”

    Akasha Dominguez said she didn’t understand why the officer engaged without backup and why he resorted to deadly force so quickly — even if her stepson had a Taser.

    “I don’t know when using deadly force became the first thing cops do in this situation,” said Michele Dominguez, the man’s sister.

    Family members said they were reaching out to civil rights attorneys and waiting for the results of the investigation, which could take months or even years.

    For now, Dominguez’s father said he would not watch the video, but acknowledged he is only delaying the inevitable.

    “I’m going to have to watch the video. I know at some point I do have to see it. But I’m just so raw right now,” he said. “The last time that I saw him, he was smiling. He was happy. And the last thing that I want to see is to have my last memory of him be him going through what he did in that video.”

    Noah Goldberg

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  • LAPD officers involved in Keenan Anderson death found out of policy

    LAPD officers involved in Keenan Anderson death found out of policy

    Several Los Angeles police officers broke with department policy in the arrest of Keenan Anderson, whose death after a traffic stop in January reignited debates about the suitability of police for dealing with people in distress, the Police Commission ruled.

    Although not unanimous, the commission Tuesday found that officers deviated from LAPD policy on multiple occasions when they restrained and shocked the 31-year-old teacher and father with a Taser while trying to take him into custody.

    The civilian oversight panel generally agreed with the conclusions of LAPD Chief Michel Moore and an internal department review board, which itself was split on several policy questions.

    Moore and police commissioners concluded that one of the officers continued to use a stun gun on Anderson, a Black man, even after he no longer posed an immediate threat. Moore and the commission also ruled that, whether inadvertently or not, two of the officers did not have cause to hold Anderson down by the neck. Under the department’s policy, such contact to a person’s neck is considered deadly force.

    Anderson’s case garnered international attention, in part because he was a cousin of Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of the Black Lives Matter Global Network. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass strongly condemned the incident, which happened weeks after she took office and sparked calls for changes to police policies related to traffic enforcement and the use of stun guns.

    It also added kindling to a fiery debate about how police interact with people in crisis, after a string of high-profile deadly encounters in recent years.

    Veteran civil rights attorney Carl Douglas, who filed a wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of Anderson’s family, called Tuesday’s ruling a rare but welcome decision from an oversight body he said too often signs off on police misbehavior. The finding was “one small step toward justice,” he said.

    “However, we are mindful that this fight is not over. The city is going to be defended vigorously by the city attorney as they do in virtually every case,” Douglas said Wednesday, pointing out that the city has already filed motions denying any responsibility for Anderson’s death. “We are heartened that the commission saw the decision to Taser Mr. Anderson as an abomination. They don’t call it an abomination, but I can.”

    What the body camera footage captured was the lack of training for officers on when Taser use is appropriate, Douglas said, adding that officers often misinterpret a person squirming as a form of resistance that justifies the device’s use.

    Douglas joined about two dozen activists and members of Anderson’s family who held a press conference before Tuesday’s Police Commission meeting, demanding the officers involved be held accountable. Afterward, the group appealed directly to the commissioners in what became an emotionally-charged meeting.

    The commission’s ruling was denounced by the Los Angeles Police Protective League, which represents the city’s rank-and-file officers.

    “We strongly disagree with these politically influenced findings, each responding officer acted responsibly in dealing with Mr. Anderson who was high on cocaine and ran into traffic after fleeing a car accident he caused,” the League’s board of directors said in a statement to The Times Wednesday.

    “The coroner confirmed he was not tased(SIC) but rather drive-stunned when he refused to follow simple directions while in the middle of a busy street, the board wrote. “Mr. Anderson and Mr. Anderson alone was responsible for what occurred.”

    The encounter that ended with Anderson’s death began sometime before 3:30 p.m. on Jan. 3, when Joshua Coombs, a motorcyle officer assigned to the West Traffic Division, responded to what the LAPD referred to at the time as a “felony hit-and-run” car crash at Venice and Lincoln boulevards.

    Coombs encountered Anderson darting on foot through traffic in apparent distress and ordered Anderson to sit on a nearby street corner. Anderson complied for some time, but then took off running, yelling that he was fearful for his safety.

    Coombs followed after him, as did officers Jaime Fuentes and Rasheen Ford, who had seen the incident unfold as they drove past in their department squad car. The officers eventually caught up to Anderson and pinned him to the ground, as he resisted their efforts to put him on his stomach and handcuff him. They were eventually joined by two other officers, Christopher Walters and Stephen Feldman.

    The commission reviewed the case during a closed-door session of its regular meeting, which was was briefly interrupted when president Erroll Southers ordered the room cleared because of disruptions in the audience.

    Much of the criticism of the police response centered on Fuentes discharging his Taser six times in the span of 42 seconds. But Moore ruled, and the commission agreed, that officer Fuentes’ first four deployments of the stun gun were within policy.

    However, a department force review board faulted Fuentes for his final two Taser uses, delivered as other officers used their body weight and arm holds to control Anderson. Fuentes, a patrol officer in Pacific Division, told internal investigators that he used the so-called drive stun function, in which the device is pressed directly against someone’s skin rather than fired from a distance, to prevent the incident from escalating further. Fuentes said he continued shocking Anderson because he wouldn’t stop resisting.

    The ruling wasn’t unanimous. The majority of the board said that, although Anderson was still pulling away from the officers, he didn’t present a threat to them and appeared instead to be starting to comply with their commands.

    The majority noted that Fuentes admitted in his department interview to using the drive-stun mode for pain compliance, against department policy, and said it would have preferred that he had reassessed the situation and switched “to a different force option after the third TASER deployment.”

    Several board members argued that the first four stuns were in compliance because the officers believed they could still be harmed due to Anderson’s continued resistance.

    Moore wrote in his report that, in making his decision, he considered that “Anderson was violently resisting the officers’ attempts to take him into custody.”

    “I noted the use of the TASER to be effective in assisting officers to take control of Anderson,” Moore wrote. “As it pertains to TASER activation five and six, I opined the officers had sufficient control of Anderson and that his level of resistance, while still ongoing, did not justify the use of a TASER as a reasonable force option.”

    During the final activation, Fuentes told investigators that he saw Anderson tense up, which he interpreted as an attempt to prevent officers from handcuffing him.

    Anderson was taken to an area hospital, where he later died.

    Last month, the department announced it would soon start testing out a new generation of Tasers with greater range that would preclude officers from having to use higher levels of force against uncooperative people. The eventual switch to the next-generation Taser 10 model comes on the heels of changes in the department’s Taser policy, including barring officers from using the drive stun function.

    The officers’ tactical decisions were scrutinized almost from the onset. Anderson’s family, some elected officials and police watchdogs decried what they saw as an overly aggressive response by police against someone who was disoriented and needed care after being involved in a traffic collision.

    Several policing experts who reviewed video for The Times of the Jan. 3 incident — from cameras worn by officers — previously said the amount of force used by the officers seemed excessive given Anderson’s actions and that their tactics appeared haphazard.

    An autopsy by the L.A. County coroner’s office later identified an enlarged heart and cocaine use as the causes of death, and did not rule it a homicide. Whether his death was natural, an accident or a homicide remains undetermined, according to the coroner’s website. Anderson’s family has disputed the report’s findings, contending that it deflected blame from the police.

    During their investigation, detectives from the LAPD’s force investigations division slowed down footage of the encounter and counted nine times in which officers Fuentes and Ford made contact with Anderson’s neck during the struggle. Both officers denied applying pressure or otherwise restricting Anderson’s ability to breathe.

    At one point in a video of the encounter, Anderson is lying on the pavement and struggling with officers when he yelled out, “They are trying to kill me. Kilo tried to kill me.” After being told to stop struggling, video showed Ford’s right hand on the side of Anderson’s jaw, with his thumb apparently near Anderson’s neck, the report says.

    With a 3 to 2 vote, commissioners also found fault with officers for failing to put Anderson “in a recovery position as soon as practical.”

    After days of mounting public pressure, Moore took the rare step of releasing additional footage from the encounter, which showed a distraught Anderson crying out for help as multiple officers held him down. Eventually, he washandcuffed and hobbled at his ankles before paramedics take him away. He later died at a hospital.

    Anderson’s death also galvanized a push for removing police from responding to minor traffic collisions, as well as to stop them from pulling over motorists for traffic violations, arguing that communities of color have historically borne the brunt of such enforcement. Instead, they said, such tasks could be handled by unarmed civilians.

    Melina Abdullah, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Los Angeles and a professor at Cal State L.A., said she was heartened by the commission’s ruling, even if it was a somewhat hollow “victory” since it wouldn’t bring Anderson back.

    “Justice for Keenan Anderson would mean that he were there to raise his child, that he was there to continue to be a model for his brothers, that he was there to be a model teacher,” said Abdullah. “But justice in his name looks like accountability, making sure that the cops who killed him are held accountable.”

    Libor Jany, Richard Winton

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  • Police arrest and charge man with armed robbery after dramatic tram stand-off – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Police arrest and charge man with armed robbery after dramatic tram stand-off – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    • In short: An intense stand-off on a Melbourne CBD tram ended with police using a taser to take a man into custody.
    • What’s next? A man will front Melbourne’s Magistrate’s Court on Saturday night charged with several offences.

    Police have arrested a man on a Melbourne tram after an intense stand-off in which he allegedly threatened another passenger with a knife.

    The man, who police say is 57 years old, was filmed on the Route 48 tram at about 8:30am on Saturday intimidating the tram driver and other passengers.

    Authorities allege the man entered a Collins Street business earlier on Saturday while armed with a knife and stole items before boarding the tram to flee.

    Police were notified and instructed the driver to keep tram doors closed, as the man appeared to threaten a nearby woman in attempts to negotiate with police.

    Mobile phone footage shows armed police officers storm the tram before subduing the man with a taser.

    Police have charged a man with armed robbery, false imprisonment, assault and threats to kill.

    The man, of no fixed place of address, will appear at Melbourne’s Magistrates’ Court on Saturday night.

    A woman received minor injuries during the incident.

    In a statement, Yarra Trams thanked police for preventing serious injuries. 

    “The safety of our employees and passengers is always our highest priority. We commend the actions of our driver for their management of this stressful situation, as well as thank Victoria Police for their quick response to detain the…

    Original Author Link click here to read complete story..

    MMP News Author

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  • ‘It hurts. It itches. It’s painful’: Woman loses eye after being tased by deputies

    ‘It hurts. It itches. It’s painful’: Woman loses eye after being tased by deputies

    BUTTS COUNTY, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – A woman being held in a middle Georgia jail is now blind in her right eye after being tased. The deputy responsible for it, isn’t facing criminal charges, because police allege Ashanti Walls lunged at them.

    Walls’ attorney, however, is arguing his client’s mental health medication was withheld and then was punished for having a psychotic episode.

    The case represents the myriad challenges law enforcement personnel face when dealing with the mentally ill in Georgia’s prisons.

    The incident happened on Sept. 10, 2021; Walls had been in the Butts County jail for five days already. She had also been tased twice before, according to jail records. Incident reports and Walls’ medical file revealed jail staff described aggression, delusions and yelling. Staff also said Walls urinated on herself and defecated in her cell.

    Walls, 58, has been diagnosed as bipolar schizophrenic, according to her medical records, but despite the incidents while she was in the Butts County jail, she was not offered medication over those five days. In fact, her medical file shows she only received medication for her mental illness after the loss of her eye.

    The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) investigated the incident and interviewed the sergeant who tased Walls in the eye; Atlanta News First Investigates obtained the video of the interview.

    The third tasing happened as jail staff were entering Walls’ cell to serve a meal. In the video interview, the sergeant said Walls was in a “crouched down” position when she entered Walls’ cell and “I couldn’t see her.”

    “As soon as the door popped … [Walls] just forcefully pushed it open,” the sergeant said.

    The sergeant told state investigators her body camera malfunctioned, so it did not record the moments leading up to the incident or the tasing itself, only the scene after. Jail surveillance obtained by Atlanta News First investigates only shows one angle and has no audio.

    The sergeant said she “already had my taser out, prepared … based on [Walls’ history].

    “Something was wrong, mentally,” the segreant said.

    On Sept. 12, 2021, according to records, a Grady Memorial Hospital doctor requested Walls take Zyprexa once a day, among other medications. Zyprexa is the brand name for Olanzapine, used to treat mental health disorders.

    “Without the medication, [being] confined in a space only worsens the conditions,” said Aaron Durden, Walls’ attorney.

    According to Butts County Sheriff’s office policy, after someone is arrested and arrives at the jail, inmates should be classified “to enhance safety and humane treatment,” using “behavioral patterns … and any special needs.” The classification, which is a measure to minimize risks, is done when staff complete an objective classification form.

    However, when Atlanta News First Investigates asked for records to determine if jail staff completed that process for Walls, the agency said there were no records.

    “What’s disturbing is why have a policy if you’re not going to follow it,” Durden said.

    Instead of following and implementing protocols for responding to inmates with symptoms associated with psychotic episodes, Durden said the mentally ill are met with the punishment of a prong. “So, it seems as if protocol was walk in [and] be ready to tase her, let’s just go with that,” he said.

    The GBI asked about the type of force used as well.

    “What would be a circumstance you would use pepper spray instead of a taser,” the GBI asked the sergeant in the interview.

    “I’m not really sure,” the sergeant said. “In my opinion, I don’t think pepper spray would have been successful due to her being so violent already and in an altered mental state.”

    “I was a mess … a nervous wreck,” the sergeant said. “I would never mean to do that to anyone. It really hit me hard.”

    Walls feels differently. “It was point and shoot,” she said. “It hurts. It itches. It’s painful. There’s no eyeball there at all.”

    According to her medical records, Walls underwent an emergency surgery called enucleation, the removal of the eye globe.

    “When I cry, it burns,” Walls said. “And it’s just very uncomfortable so I try not to cry.”

    Jonathan Adams, who serves as district attorney for the Towaliga Judicial Circuit, is not filing criminal changes against the sergeant.

    “After careful review of the case I believe the Butts County Sheriff’s Office acted lawfully under the applicable statues,” Adams, whose circuit includes Butts, Lamar and Monroe counties, wrote in a letter.

    Adams’ decision came after the GBI conducted its investigation to determine criminal wrongdoing.

    Atlanta News First has been attempting to contact the Butts County Sheriff’s Office for comment on this incident for several months, to no avail. However, after this story first aired during our 4 p.m. newscast on Oct. 4, a spokesperson for the office contacted Atlanta News First and apologized for the delay. The spokesperson also confirmed Butts County Sheriff Gary Long is now available for an interview.

    At the core, experts argue types of use of force is all about training.

    “When I do my training courses, I ask what’s the best way to prevent tragedies. I write on the blackboard or PowerPoint, I.T.T.S.,” said Dr. Laurence Miller, a nationally recognized clinical and forensic psychologist. “That stands for ‘It’s the training, stupid.’ “People do what they’re trained to do.”

    Miller is also a use-of-force expert, and said law enforcement personnel – particularly those assigned to jails – should have more training on force without a weapon.

    “You can have several personnel, there or four or five personnel who can physically but safely, restrain an inmate,” he said.

    However, he maintains the best line of defense is evaluation and treatment. “If this lady had been having her psychotic symptoms controlled in a medical way, she probably wouldn’t have been in that situation to have gotten out of control, to have been in that fearful anger state to begin with,” Miller said.

    Miller noted even when medication is offered, staff cannot force inmates to take it in most cases.

    In June 2022, the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council released its state study, reporting on identifying predictors of mental illness in Georgia’s county jails. The study found mentally ill people are represented in county jails at twice the rate they are in the general population.

    Additionally, the average stay for mentally ill is roughly double the average stay of those without mental illness.

    If there’s something you would like Atlanta News First Investigates to dig into, fill out this submission form.

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