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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Rocco Parascandola and Larry McShane

Fatal encounter between NYPD cops, bipolar Brooklyn man lasted less than 10 seconds

NEW YORK _ The tragic showdown ended as quickly as it began.

A fatal confrontation between five NYPD officers and a bipolar Brooklyn man carrying what looked like a gun lasted less than 10 seconds, a police official told the New York Daily News.

None of the four officers who fired a combined 10 shots at Crown Heights resident Saheed Vassell was involved in any previous on-duty shootings, the same official said Friday.

NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce said the cops had little time to ponder their options Wednesday after responding to three 911 calls reporting a man on the street with a gun.

"You saw how quickly that transpired," said Boyce. "These officers didn't have much time. When you're presented with an immediate threat, it is different from being able to step back and talk."

Boyce noted that seven of the eight NYPD lines of duty deaths since he became chief of detectives in 2014 involved people with some kind of mental illness.

"Every situation is different," said Boyce when asked if lethal force was the right response to a mentally ill suspect threatening officers. " ... It depends on each incident _ not easy to say, policy-wise."

Security video shot in the seconds before his death showed him wielding a silver metal piece that resembled a gun _ and pointing it at pedestrians, including a woman walking hand-in-hand with a small child.

Before police opened fire, Vassell leveled the shiny piece of metal at the arriving officers with both hands in a combat-style stance.

The dead man's family acknowledged that Vassell, the father of a 15-year-old son, refused to take medication for his condition.

Susan Herman, NYPD deputy commissioner for collaborative policing, said police were trying to eliminate the stigma of mental illness and steer people to treatment facilities.

The cops are "trying to come up with other alternatives where the Police Department is really the last resort and not the first resort," she said.

"But we always have to make a distinction between an immediate, urgent life-threatening situation and one where you can reflect upon a variety of options."

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