What legal duty and liability risks arise in calls for police intervention in non-criminal mental health incidents, and particularly with persons threatening suicide? These calls may come from business owners irritated by an apparently homeless person walking back and forth in front of the business, mumbling or acting out; a mentally ill person calling the police for personal crisis intervention; or from a family member or domestic partner worried about a loved one who is armed and threatening suicide. Business owners can be frustrated. Community members may fear someone acting bizarrely in public. Family members may simply be desperate for help and not know where else to turn.
Cops know that calls involving suicidal persons can quickly turn from suicidal to homicidal. Suicide by cop, or law enforcement-forced-assisted suicide, accounted for as many as 11% of all officer-involved shootings in a 10-year study in Los Angeles County. Over half of the law enforcement-forced-assisted suicide subjects brandished firearms or realistic facsimile weapons.









