(9-14-16) Here is a refreshing reminder why Crisis Intervention Team training for the police should be required in every jurisdiction.
When the police get it right
By M. Moss, first published in The Washington Post.
“F— you pigs!”
This was last month. My son was on his side on the ground, in handcuffs, a police officer pinning down his legs, another officer holding down his upper body.
“F— you piiiiiigs!”
When it looked as though he might be scraping his face on the asphalt of the Washington & Old Dominion Trail bike path, the officers moved him, while holding him down, so his face was on the grass.
“Buddy, if you calm down, we’ll let you sit up.”
“F— you piiiigs!”
The joggers and bikers on the trail moved past, looking concerned but not stopping to turn the scene into a spectacle.
My son has a neurological disability. He didn’t ask for it, and learning to live with it has not been an easy task. He is also a big man — 6-foot-2, 180 pounds and fit. When he drinks, which is rare, he is unpredictable, aggressive and — though I hate the expression — a danger to himself and others.