Detroit police expand mental health operations

Detroit — With Detroit police responding to a record number of runs involving mentally ill…

Detroit police expand mental health operations

Detroit — With Detroit police responding to a record number of runs involving mentally ill residents, Chief James White on Wednesday announced an overhaul of the department’s Crisis Intervention Team and new tools that he said would give officers more options when dealing with citizens in crisis.

The changes, some of which The Detroit News reported last week, include centralizing the Crisis Intervention Team operations and equipping CIT officers with less-than-lethal weapons such Bolawraps, which are hand-held devices that discharge a cord that coils around subjects’ arms or legs to restrain them.

Detroit police expand mental health operations

During a news conference at Huntington Place, White said he also will introduce two centralized Co-Response Units, one each to cover the city’s east and west sides, which will be made up of full-time officers dedicated to mental health runs. Currently, each precinct has at least one officer with Crisis Intervention Training for runs involving people with mental illnesses.

A “throw camera” that can be lobbed into houses during barricaded-gunman situations, police drones and a “virtual reality helmet” for training also were discussed Wednesday. Prior to the news briefing, police officials demonstrated the tools for members of the City Council, the Detroit Board of Police Commissioners and residents.