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California community demands end to police calls for mental health emergencies after death of 15-year-old boy |
2024-03-26 |
"Because people are neurodivergent it is not a death sentence" [FoxNews] San Bernardino sheriff deputies shot Ryan Gainer, a 15-year-old boy, amid a confrontation. A 15-year-old autistic boy was shot and killed in a confrontation with police in Southern California, according to a recent report. San Bernardino sheriff deputies shot and killed Ryan Gainer, a 15-year-old boy, on March 9," ABC7 reported. "He had been acting out that afternoon and a family member called 911," according to the outlet. "Guess who had to tell her sister that her baby was dead? I did," the boy's aunt, Sheila Silver, said. The family is considering suing the county, per the report. Activists in Oakland, California, held a demonstration on Sunday in response to the shooting and called for police to stop being dispatched for calls related to mental health. "We are calling for us to decriminalize mental health care, right? We are calling to decriminalize autism. Because people are neurodivergent it is not a death sentence," activist James Burch told reporters. "Anyone coming into Oakland interested in public safety, what they need to know is how we keep us safe here in the city," Burch said. "How we invest in programs that are life-giving, affirmative. That treat people with respect and dignity." Tuan Hall, a mother who lost her son Miles in 2019 after he experienced a mental health episode and was killed by police, believes that trained mental health experts should be called for mental health emergencies and not police. "When something is a medical condition, which is autism and mental health, we shouldn't rely on police to come and be the first responders," Hall said. She compared Gainer's death with her son, Miles. "It was very similar to Miles. Miles had a garden tool" that she said he believed was a "staff from God." "He was in a mental health emergency, so was Ryan. Ryan was autistic. All he needed was help," she added. The San Bernadino Police Department did not respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. Related: Autistic: 2024-03-05 Michigan man sentenced to prison for violent social media threats against Jews Autistic: 2024-02-18 Hamas endangers you too Autistic: 2024-02-03 Belgian farmers lay siege to huge North Sea port and block Dutch border crossings while Germany grinds to a halt with crippling transport strikes as EU scrambles to defuse protest chaos engulfing Europe Related: San Bernardino: 2024-02-11 CEO of Nigerian bank among dead in fatal California helicopter crash San Bernardino: 2024-02-02 High-speed train that will hurtle from Los Angeles to Las Vegas at 186mph gets the green light for $2.5billion funding boost San Bernardino: 2023-12-26 A List of America's Most Dangerous Cities and Towns Just Dropped. Here's What They Have in Common. |
Posted by:Skidmark |
#3 Because people are neurodivergent it is not a death sentence The mileage of others around them will necessarily vary... |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2024-03-26 10:35 |
#2 I think cities need to decide what they want more - crazy people loose on their streets or things that are dangerous if operated when crazy people are around. You know, busses, subways, open stairways, flammable stuff, etc. |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2024-03-26 10:33 |
#1 Subway 'pusher' accused of shoving victim to his death in front of a moving train is 24-year-old with history of mental illness and arrests beginning when he was just 16 Neurologically divergent. |
Posted by: Skidmark 2024-03-26 10:27 |