Police crisis intervention team
A Crisis Intervention Team is a police mental health collaborative program found in North America. The term "CIT" is often used to describe both a program and a training in law enforcement to help guide interactions between law enforcement and those living with a mental illness.
The National Alliance on Mental Illness Crisis Intervention Team programs are local initiatives designed to improve the way law enforcement and the community respond to people experiencing mental health crisis. CIT programs are built on strong partnerships between law enforcement, mental health provider agencies, and individuals and families affected by mental illness."
History
Mental health contacts and intervention by law enforcement became part of the profession with the deinstitutionalization of nonviolent mentally ill patients in the 1960s. The goal was to allow people receiving treatment in an institution to continue to receive the treatment but from community service agencies. The money saved by hospital closing was to be transferred to outpatient community programs.The money intended for outpatient services did not always reach the community. Funding for outpatient treatment services and programs remains lacking in many areas of the United States. This created a gap for people in need of services. Without the assistance, many people stop their treatment programs; which resulted in some individuals becoming unstable while living in the community, with their families who were not always equipped to be caregivers.
When people living with the illness experienced psychotic episodes or had a poor quality of life in communities, the police often became the primary resource for assistance. Law enforcement has historically been seen as serving vulnerable community members, typically viewed as victims of crime. Due to the lack of resources and treatment for people with mental illness, they became some of the most vulnerable individuals in many communities, leading officers to become frontline mental health workers.
In September 1987, Memphis, TN, police responded to a 911 call involving a man with a history of mental illness who was cutting himself with a knife and threatening suicide. When officers arrived, they ordered the man to drop the knife. The man became more upset and ran toward the officers with the knife still in his hand. Officers then shot and killed the man.
Officers were trained to use deadly force when they perceived their own or someone else's life to be in grave danger. This incident received criticism because the perception was that the only life in danger was the man who wanted to harm himself. This occurred during a time of racial tension in Memphis, and the man was African-American while both officers were white. This incident was the catalyst for the creation of the Crisis Intervention Team in Memphis.
The Memphis Police Department partnered with the Memphis Chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), mental health providers, and two universities in organizing, training, and implementing a specialized unit. This new alliance aimed to develop a more intelligent, understandable, and safe approach to mental health crisis events. The community effort led to the formation of the Memphis Police Department's Crisis Intervention Team.
The Memphis CIT program has achieved notable success, in large part due to its true community partnership. Today, the "Memphis Model" has been adopted by more than 2,700 communities in the U.S. and other countries.
Core elements
The University of Memphis School of Urban Affairs and Public Policy Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice CIT Center released a paper outlining central components of CIT in 2007. The elements of CIT programs identified are:Ongoing Elements
- Partnerships: Law Enforcement, Advocacy, Mental Health
- Community Ownership: Planning, Implementation & Networking
- Policies and Procedures
- CIT: Officer, Dispatcher, Coordinator
- Curriculum: CIT Training
- Mental Health Receiving Facility: Emergency Services
- Evaluation and Research
- In-Service Training
- Recognition and Honors
Implementations
United States
Oregon
In the state of Oregon, CIT programs were implemented after the death of James Chasse, who was beaten and repeatedly tased by three Portland police officers in 2006. Chasse, who had schizophrenia, sustained 16 broken ribs, a broken shoulder and sternum, and major internal injuries. He was taken to the city jail, where the medical staff refused to admit him and ordered that he be taken to a hospital. But he died en route. The three officers were never indicted for their part in his death. Medics later testified that his broken ribs were most likely due to the emergency trauma care he received.Chasse's death prompted an outcry in the news media, in response to which Portland mayor Tom Potter instituted a CIT program. Other cities and counties in Oregon followed suit.
Texas
Starting in late 2011, a group of Texas CIT officers met in Austin, Texas, to lay the foundation for Texas' first CIT Officer's Association. The association's goal is to promote mental health education as it pertains to law enforcement's interaction and care for the mentally ill. The association will also host an annual conference where stakeholders can discuss new options for better practices in the field. The Association launched its website in 2012.New Mexico
In Albuquerque, NM, the police department began a Crisis Intervention Team program in 1996 after 6 people were killed in crisis related police shootings between 1994 and 1995. The increase was associated with victim participant homicides or suicide by cop. Sergeant William Pettit went to the Memphis Police Department to understand a Crisis Intervention Team model in 1988. Sgt. Pettit was instructed about the Memphis program and implemented elements in order to create a CIT program within the Albuquerque Police Department.Albuquerque was hit again with community tragedies involving law enforcement interaction with people living with a mental illness that sparked an investigation by the Department of Justice in 2014. The community voiced their concerns and the investigation by the DOJ also noted, "fatal confrontations with individuals experiencing mental health crises continue to cause significant public concern over the department's ability and willingness to consider the safety and well-being of the individuals in distress." The finding letter also stated, "A significant amount of the force we reviewed was used against persons with mental illness and in crisis." During this investigation the shooting of James Boyd occurred.
The findings letter and outcry from the community ended in a court appointed settlement agreement with the Department of Justice. The settlement agreement determined that all officers will be trained in CIT and that 40% of field officer would receive additional specialized training in interactions with people experiencing crisis. The agreement also stated that the department's full time crisis intervention unit be staffed with 12 full time detectives.