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Registries of disabled people debated in police reform talks | News, Sports, Jobs

Associated Press HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) Victoria Mitchell wishes police would have had the full picture of her son’s struggles with mental illness and reacted differently before an officer shot and killed him last year in Ansonia, Connecticut. Her son, Michael Gregory, had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and attempted suicide several times. He was in crisis when he was shot on Jan. 2, 2020, while charging officers with a knife, after telling them they were going to have to shoot him. Mitchell, a nurse who cares for people with mental illness, supports some parts of a proposed statewide law enforcement registry of people with disabilities including mental illness. The idea is being studied by the state’s Police Transparency & Accountability Task Force as a way to alert officers about someone’s disability and avoid deadly use of force.

Registries of disabled people debated in U S police reform talks

Some police departments around the U.S. are expanding the use of voluntary registries of disabled people to include those with mental illness. It s part of an effort to improve how police interact with people with mental illness and avoid deadly shootings by officers.

Registries Of Disabled People Debated In Connecticut Police Reform Talks

Human Trafficking Operation Nets Multiple Arrests In County

Review: Crime Scene: The Vanishing At The Cecil Hotel

True-crime docuseries are designed to make you keep watching. Every episode ends on a cliffhanger, as the filmmakers lay out a trail of breadcrumbs leading viewers through a shocking crime and into a mystery toward its conclusion which, if you watch a lot of these things, is rarely as satisfying as one might hope. More so than many documentaries of its type, Crime Scene: The Vanishing At The Cecil Hotel does actually provide concrete answers to its central questions. But make sure you watch the whole thing, or else you’ll walk away with some wild ideas about what happened to 21-year-old Canadian university student Elisa Lam when she vanished from the Cecil Hotel in downtown Los Angeles on January 31, 2013.

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