Mother files civil rights lawsuit
Last October, when South End resident Hope Coleman called for an ambulance to take her mentally-ill adult son to the hospital, she had no idea it would set off a chain of events that would end in his death.
Last week, Coleman filed a civil rights lawsuit, represented by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Economic Justice, that challenges the Boston Police Department’s and Suffolk District Attorney’s account of the events on that early Sunday morning that led to the death of her 31-year-old son, Terrance.
According to the lawsuit filed, Coleman is seeking compensatory and punitive damages for wrongful death against the City of Boston, BPD Commissioner William Evans, Boston Emergency Medical Services Chief Sophia Dyer, the two police officers who shot Terrence, the two EMTs who arrived at the Coleman residence and the 911 dispatcher who received Hope Coleman’s call.
A deadly 911 call
Coleman had called for medical assistance because her son, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, had become withdrawn and spent the majority of the day outside in the cold. She told the emergency call operator that she did not want police officers to come, as she feared it might further agitate her son, and only wanted an ambulance to transport Terrence to Tufts Medical Center.
However,
the 911 dispatcher entered the call in the emergency services system
with the code “EDP2” for emotionally disturbed persons who are violent
or pose physical harm to others, and two police officers, Garrett Boyle
and Kevin Finn, arrived at the home.
The
mother did not allow the officers to enter her home, but she allowed in
two EMTs, Kyle MacKinnon and Terrence Mentele, to enter and escort her
son to the ambulance.
Upon
seeing the police, Terrence Coleman stopped in the communal foyer of
the building and refused to go outside. The officers entered the foyer
at this moment. A scuffle ensued and both officers shot at him.
Hours
after the incident, Evans told press that the officers had responded
with deadly force because Coleman had attacked the EMTs with a “large
knife.” Hope Coleman denies this and states that although there was a
knife at the kitchen table, her son never grabbed it.
The
lawsuit states that although defendants Boyle, Finn, Mentele and
Mackinnon made similar statements about Coleman brandishing a knife,
their statements are inconsistent about where and when Terrence Coleman
first allegedly pulled out a knife, where Hope Coleman was standing, and
when the EMTs called for assistance.
In
addition, according to the lawsuit, police officers obtained a search
warrant and seized a kitchen knife from inside the apartment, despite
the accounts that claimed the knife was used in the foyer of the
apartment building.
Allegations
The
suit alleges that the BPD used excessive, unreasonable and deadly force
and that the City of Boston systematically and knowingly fails to
properly train police officers and EMTs to “provide appropriate services
for such persons” with mental health disabilities and lacks a system to
categorize and respond to 911 calls involving persons with mental
health disabilities.
During
the investigation, conducted by Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F.
Conley’s office, Boyle and Finn were placed on leave and underwent
counseling.
Some
critics, such as Sophia Hall, Lawyers’ Committee attorney for the
Coleman suit, say that there should have been a more independent
investigation.
“The
Suffolk DA did complete an investigation in-house,” said Hall. “Even
before we had Hope as a client, we sent a letter to the city of Boston
saying it was important to have a third-party decision maker on whether
the officers should be held liable.”
The
shooting of Coleman was seen by many anti-police-brutality activists at
the time as further reasoning to implement police-worn body cameras in
Boston.
A pilot
program for body cameras was implemented by the Boston Police Department
in 2017 and on Monday, Mayor Marty Walsh’s office announced that the
fiscal year 2019 budget will include a $2 million investment for the
permanent adoption of police-worn body cameras.
In
addition to greater transparency, Hall told the Banner that the
Lawyers’ Committee hopes the city will implement systemic change and
better training for law enforcement and medical emergency officials on
how to properly respond to persons with mental health disabilities.
A
2016 report released by the Ruderman Family Foundation, a disability
organization, analyzed nationwide police incidents from 2013 to 2015 and
found that disabled individuals make up over one-third of all people
killed by law enforcement officers.
“People
generally say Boston is progressive and forward-looking and what the
Coleman tragedy shows us is that actually, we’re right in that list of
cities who have had deaths of black men,” said Hall. “We’re right there
with Ferguson, Baton Rouge and Sacramento.”