This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/20/nyregion/nypd-sergeant-fatal-shooting-bronx-woman.html

The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Police Commissioner Says ‘We Failed’ in Fatal Shooting of Bronx Woman, 66 In Quick Response, De Blasio Calls Fatal Shooting of Mentally Ill Woman ‘Unacceptable’
(about 4 hours later)
A New York police sergeant who fatally shot a 66-year-old woman in the Bronx on Tuesday in what the commissioner called a failure has been placed on modified duty and stripped of his gun and badge, the authorities said on Wednesday. Mayor Bill de Blasio, speaking in strikingly blunt terms, said on Wednesday that the fatal police shooting of a mentally ill 66-year-old woman in the Bronx was “tragic and unacceptable.”
“What is clear in this one instance: We failed,” Commissioner James P. O’Neill said Wednesday morning. The woman, Deborah Danner, had a long history of mental illness, and Mr. de Blasio said the sergeant who fired the fatal shot had failed to follow Police Department protocol for dealing with the woman.
The sergeant, Hugh Barry, an eight-year veteran, was also equipped with a Taser, the police said. He did not follow police procedures for dealing with emotionally disturbed people, Mr. O’Neill said. “It should never have happened. It’s as simple as that,” the mayor said at a midday news conference at City Hall, echoing the comments made by Police Commissioner James P. O’Neill earlier on Wednesday morning.
“That’s not what was supposed to happen,” he said. “That’s not how we’re trained.” The sergeant, Hugh Barry, an eight-year veteran of the department, was stripped of his gun and badge and placed on modified duty within hours of the shooting, which happened early Tuesday evening in the Castle Hill neighborhood.
The victim was identified as Deborah Danner, who a relative said had been mentally ill for years. Neighbors said Ms. Danner was acting erratically Tuesday night in the moments before the police arrived at their 13-story building in the Castle Hill neighborhood. The action against the sergeant and the condemnation of his conduct were notable for how quickly and unequivocally the commissioner and the mayor responded to the shooting, which, like all police-involved shootings, will be the subject of lengthy investigations by the department and by prosecutors.
The shooting occurred around 6 p.m., when the police responded to a 911 call for an emotionally disturbed person at an apartment on the seventh floor of a building on Pugsley Avenue. A neighbor had made a complaint about the woman, the police said. “What is clear in this one instance: We failed,” Mr. O’Neill said at a news briefing on Wednesday morning. “I want to know why it happened.”
The police said the sergeant, who was in uniform, entered the apartment and found Ms. Danner in a bedroom holding a pair of scissors. She put down the scissors, then picked up a baseball bat and tried to hit him with it, the police said. The sergeant fired two shots, striking Ms. Danner in her torso. She died at Jacobi Medical Center. The episode was unfolding at a crucial moment, amid a heated national debate about race and the use of force by the police, and just one month into Mr. O’Neill’s tenure as commissioner.
A neighbor who gave only his first name, Rey, said that when he walked out of his seventh-floor apartment a little after 6 p.m., Ms. Danner was in the hallway and she cursed at him. He said he laughed it off because it was a regular occurrence. But by the time he got to the elevators, Ms. Danner had gone back inside her apartment, and the police had charged into the hall. Mr. de Blasio said that the sergeant had failed to take steps that could have avoided the fatal confrontation, including waiting for the arrival of the specialized Emergency Services Unit, using his Taser or requesting that police negotiators be sent to the scene. “There was an opportunity to slow things down here and wait to get everything set up the right way,” he said.
Wallace Cooke Jr., 74, who said he was a cousin of Ms. Danner’s mother, said Ms. Danner lived alone. She learned she had mental illness when she was in college, Mr. Cooke said. The New York Police Department has expanded the availability of Tasers in the last year in an attempt to reduce the use of firearms, training an additional 4,000 officers to use the devices and nearly tripling the number in circulation.
“I resent her being dead this morning,” he said. Several elected officials, including the Bronx borough president, Ruben Diaz Jr., and the City Council speaker, Melissa Mark-Viverito, as well as Ms. Danner’s sister, Jennifer Danners, called for an investigation by the state attorney general.
Mr. Cooke said Ms. Danner’s sister, who he said lived nearby, was in the hallway asking to talk to Ms. Danner when she was shot. Amy Spitalnick, a spokeswoman for the New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, said that the office would review the shooting to see if it fell under the attorney general’s jurisdiction to investigate the deaths of civilians killed by law enforcement officers, a power created by an executive order by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo in 2015.
Ms. Danner had not worked in years, and the police had had interactions with her before, Mr. Cooke said. “We extend our deepest condolences to Ms. Danner’s family,” Ms. Spitalnick said.
”Multiple, multiple, multiple times,” he said. On Tuesday, the police arrived at the building around 6 p.m. after receiving a 911 call about an emotionally disturbed person. Neighbors said Ms. Danner had been acting erratically around that time.
Ms. Danner’s mother lived in an apartment on the building’s second floor before she died a few years ago, Mr. Cooke said. Sergeant Barry, who was in uniform, entered Ms. Danner’s seventh-floor apartment and found her in a bedroom holding a pair of scissors, the police said. At some point during their exchange, she put down the scissors, picked up a baseball bat and tried to hit him with it, the police said. The sergeant fired two shots, striking Ms. Danner in her torso.
The police said the investigation was continuing. The whole exchange lasted about 15 to 20 minutes, and the shooting occurred in close quarters, the police said. Ms. Danner died at Jacobi Medical Center.
Wallace Cooke Jr., who said he was a cousin of Ms. Danner’s mother, said Ms. Danner learned she had mental illness when she was in college.
“I resent her being dead this morning,” said Mr. Cooke, a former police officer who retired in 1984 after working for 15 years at the 26th Precinct in Harlem. “It’s totally unnecessary to kill a mentally ill person.”
For many, the shooting was an echo of the fatal police shooting in 1984 of another 66-year-old woman, Eleanor Bumpurs, who was shot twice with a shotgun as officers were trying to help marshals evict her from a public housing apartment. The officer who shot her, Stephen Sullivan, said that Ms. Bumpurs was armed with a kitchen knife, and Officer Sullivan was later acquitted of a manslaughter charge.
Mr. Diaz said in an interview that he appreciated the commissioner’s tone of remorse but that the circumstances of Ms. Danner’s killing called out for review.
“Was it absolutely necessary to shoot Ms. Danner once, let alone twice?” he said. “A 66-year-old elderly woman with a medical condition is dead today. We all have to do better.”
Mr. de Blasio said that the police had been called to the building because of Ms. Danner’s behavior several other times.
She had not worked for years and lived alone, Mr. Cooke said.