Immigrants join in protest of fatal shooting by police



The man threatened deputies trying to take him back to a mental hospital.
Associated Press
COLUMBUS -- Somali immigrants upset at the fatal police shooting of a man they say had mental health problems rallied Friday at city hall to protest the death.
Nasir Abdi, 23, was shot Wednesday as four Franklin County deputies tried to take him back to a mental hospital where he had been force-fed medications.
Columbus police detectives said Deputy Jason Evans, a seven-year veteran, shot Abdi after he threatened the deputies with a kitchen knife that had a 6-inch blade.
About 50 people gathered outside city hall, and a crowd was growing Friday afternoon. Protesters held signs with statements such as, "Nasir Abdi needed medication, not a bullet."
Perspectives
Bashir Mohamud, a 23-year-old biomedical engineering student, came to the protest because he thought Abdi shouldn't have died.
"The police just shot him without reason. I believe they could have saved him instead of killing him," said Mohamud, an Ohio State University student who came to Columbus from Somalia about three years ago.
While the sheriff's office was familiar with Abdi and his mental health problems, Evans was probably not, Sheriff Jim Karnes said Friday.
Karnes said that didn't matter to how Evans and other officers handled the shooting.
"They know how to do the job; they know what they're supposed to do; they know what they have to do to protect themselves and the public," he said.
Karnes said his officers have taken only the minimum training in dealing with mentally ill suspects required by the state.
"Unless it's mandated by the state, we probably don't have enough time or money to do it," Karnes said. "Training costs money."
Specialized crisis training
A consultant to several police departments around Ohio says the more training officers have in working with the mentally ill, the less likely it is that police and troubled suspects will be hurt.
Michael Woody, a retired Akron police officer, conducts the training at police departments with a grant through the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine.
Since 2000, more than 1,500 officers around the state and 125 police officers in Franklin County have taken the training, including 112 Columbus police officers, but no Franklin County officers, Woody said.
"We need the extra training because obviously people with mental illness and officers are unnecessarily losing their lives and being injured," he said.
Actions police normally take to subdue suspects can often make things worse with mentally ill people, he said.
Woody said in the Abdi case it appeared police showed restraint by trying to use a chemical irritant spray first.
But such sprays often don't work well with highly upset individuals or those with mental illness and are not as preferable as equipment such as stun guns, he said.
None of the Franklin County officers carried stun guns, which are touted as a nonlethal option for law enforcement, because they had not been trained with the weapons yet.
The crisis training is a priority for a state Supreme Court committee studying the mentally ill and the court system.
"You can't deal with a mentally ill person like you can with a person who is rational," state Supreme Court Justice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton said Friday. "They don't think the same way. They're in a delusion."