{"title":"Racializing Disability, Disabling Race: Policing Race and Mental Status","authors":"Camille A. Nelson","doi":"10.15779/Z38X040","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article focuses on police practices in arresting and detaining criminal suspects who have mental illnesses. It identifies three modalities police may adopt when detaining a mentally ill suspect: medical modality (and its subset the family mode), the criminal modality, and the disciplinary modality. This article examines archetypal cases in which harsher treatment of a suspect may be meted out by the police against mentally ill persons of color.To illustrate the different modalities, this article examines the case study of Donald Winters. Mr. Winters was a Caucasian male who was diagnosed with Delusional Disorder. He had threatened to kill the police officers when they attempted to apprehend him. Police understood they were dealing with a mentally ill suspect, and they restrained themselves from using violence in order to subdue him. In Coghlan v. Phillips, Mr. Coghlan, a white male known to have a criminal record and a history of mental illness, fired four to ten shots at police officers when they initially attempted to arrest him. The police officers did not return fire, but returned with a bullhorn and told Mr. Coghlan they wished to take him to a doctor. These cases are illustrative of the medical and criminal modalities and represent more appropriate police responses to mentally ill suspects. However, police seemingly demonstrate far less tolerance for suspects whose Suspect Identity Construction (“SIC”) is both a minority and mentally ill.In Banks ex rel. Banks v. Modesto City Schools District, Rosie Banks was a thirteen year old, autistic, African American girl attending a junior high school. Rosie entered a new school and at first behaved in an aggressive manner. She was taken to the principal’s office where an officer confronted Rosie as she became more aggressive and pepper sprayed her in the face. In Reynolds v. City of Little Rock, John Willie Reeves, an African American man known by police to be mentally ill, was shot to death by several officers after waving a pocket knife. In Ali v. City of Louisville, Mr. Marlby was a homeless African American man who was known by several officers to be mentally ill. He was shot to death after an encounter with police. In each of these cases, police officers often chose the disciplinary modality, and often without prior utilization of a lesser modalities. In these and other cases, the police do not utilize lesser modalities despite their knowledge that the suspect is mentally ill. This article explores the intersection of race and mental status as one that attracts heightened police scrutiny and which disparately leads to excessive use of force. It appears from the case law that the selection of the modality often depends on the racialization of the alleged offender.","PeriodicalId":386851,"journal":{"name":"Berkeley Journal of Criminal Law","volume":"12 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2011-01-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"14","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Berkeley Journal of Criminal Law","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15779/Z38X040","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 14
Abstract
This article focuses on police practices in arresting and detaining criminal suspects who have mental illnesses. It identifies three modalities police may adopt when detaining a mentally ill suspect: medical modality (and its subset the family mode), the criminal modality, and the disciplinary modality. This article examines archetypal cases in which harsher treatment of a suspect may be meted out by the police against mentally ill persons of color.To illustrate the different modalities, this article examines the case study of Donald Winters. Mr. Winters was a Caucasian male who was diagnosed with Delusional Disorder. He had threatened to kill the police officers when they attempted to apprehend him. Police understood they were dealing with a mentally ill suspect, and they restrained themselves from using violence in order to subdue him. In Coghlan v. Phillips, Mr. Coghlan, a white male known to have a criminal record and a history of mental illness, fired four to ten shots at police officers when they initially attempted to arrest him. The police officers did not return fire, but returned with a bullhorn and told Mr. Coghlan they wished to take him to a doctor. These cases are illustrative of the medical and criminal modalities and represent more appropriate police responses to mentally ill suspects. However, police seemingly demonstrate far less tolerance for suspects whose Suspect Identity Construction (“SIC”) is both a minority and mentally ill.In Banks ex rel. Banks v. Modesto City Schools District, Rosie Banks was a thirteen year old, autistic, African American girl attending a junior high school. Rosie entered a new school and at first behaved in an aggressive manner. She was taken to the principal’s office where an officer confronted Rosie as she became more aggressive and pepper sprayed her in the face. In Reynolds v. City of Little Rock, John Willie Reeves, an African American man known by police to be mentally ill, was shot to death by several officers after waving a pocket knife. In Ali v. City of Louisville, Mr. Marlby was a homeless African American man who was known by several officers to be mentally ill. He was shot to death after an encounter with police. In each of these cases, police officers often chose the disciplinary modality, and often without prior utilization of a lesser modalities. In these and other cases, the police do not utilize lesser modalities despite their knowledge that the suspect is mentally ill. This article explores the intersection of race and mental status as one that attracts heightened police scrutiny and which disparately leads to excessive use of force. It appears from the case law that the selection of the modality often depends on the racialization of the alleged offender.
这篇文章的重点是警察逮捕和拘留有精神疾病的犯罪嫌疑人的做法。它确定了警察在拘留精神病嫌疑人时可能采用的三种模式:医疗模式(及其子集家庭模式)、刑事模式和纪律模式。这篇文章考察了一些典型的案例,在这些案例中,警察可能会对有色人种的精神病患者进行更严厉的对待。为了说明不同的模式,本文考察了Donald Winters的案例研究。温特斯是一名被诊断患有妄想症的白人男性。当警察试图逮捕他时,他曾威胁要杀死他们。警方知道他们面对的是一名患有精神疾病的嫌疑人,为了制服他,他们克制自己没有使用暴力。在科格兰诉菲利普斯案(Coghlan v. Phillips)中,科格兰是一名有犯罪记录和精神病史的白人男性,当警察最初试图逮捕他时,他向警察开了四到十枪。警察没有还击,而是拿着扩音器回来,告诉科格兰他们希望带他去看医生。这些案例说明了医疗和刑事方式,代表了警方对精神病嫌疑人更适当的反应。然而,警方似乎对那些既属于少数群体又患有精神疾病的嫌疑人表现出了更少的宽容。在班克斯诉莫德斯托市学区案中,罗茜·班克斯是一名13岁的非裔美国女孩,患有自闭症,正在上初中。罗茜进入了一所新学校,起初表现得很好斗。她被带到校长办公室,当她变得更有攻击性时,一名警官与她对峙,并向她脸上喷胡椒喷雾。在雷诺兹诉小石城案(Reynolds v. City of Little Rock)中,一名被警方认为患有精神疾病的非裔美国人约翰·威利·里夫斯(John Willie Reeves)挥舞小刀后被几名警察开枪打死。在阿里诉路易斯维尔市案(Ali v. City of Louisville)中,马尔比是一名无家可归的非裔美国人,几名警官都知道他有精神疾病。他在与警察发生冲突后被击毙。在每一种情况下,警察往往选择惩戒方式,而且往往事先不使用较轻的方式。在这些案件和其他案件中,尽管警方知道嫌疑人有精神疾病,但他们不会使用较轻的方式。这篇文章探讨了种族和精神状态的交集,因为它吸引了警察的高度审查,并在不同程度上导致过度使用武力。从判例法上看,犯罪形态的选择往往取决于被控罪犯的种族化程度。