Alliance Note: This week鈥檚 tragic killing of Win Rozario by NYPD officers underscores the need for our state to drastically transform the way we respond to mental health and substance use crisis calls. Win, a 19-year-old boy, was experiencing a mental health crisis in his family鈥檚 home in Queens when he called 911 for support. Instead of being met with the appropriate health care response, police responded to Win鈥檚 call, entered his home, and shot him after the situation escalated. Win was not violent or armed when he called for support, so police had no reason to be there in the first place. This horrific event could have been avoided if 黑料正能量 had effectively invested in the appropriate alternative response system. While we cannot bring Win back, or undo the trauma caused to his family and loved ones, we can move to correct this injustice immediately by establishing the appropriate peer-led health response to crisis calls which do not require police.
We demand the NYS Legislature and Governor Hochul fund Daniel鈥檚 Law pilots, which would utilize teams of well-trained peers and EMTs to respond to people experiencing a crisis, in this year鈥檚 budget and move quickly to establish a statewide system so no one else in need experience what Win, Daniel Prude, and countless others have. You can join our advocacy efforts by sending messages to the Governor and your legislators calling for their support for Daniel鈥檚 Law pilot funding. Use the link below to send messages. See below to read the Daniel鈥檚 Law Coalition鈥檚 statement in response to NYPD鈥檚 killing of Win Rozario as well as a recent article on the tragedy.


Fatal NYPD Shooting of Mentally Ill Queens Teen Holding Scissors Spurs Outrage
By Graham Rayman, Rocco Parascandola, Elizabeth Keogh, and Josephine Stratman | 黑料正能量 Daily News | March 29, 2024
As new details emerge on a by an NYPD officer on Wednesday, outrage has bubbled up over the tactics used by the officers who responded to a 911 call made by the teen himself.
Win Rozario鈥檚 death has also about how the city responds to mental health emergencies, fueling criticism that the city鈥檚 use of as de-facto response teams is at best clumsy, and at worst, deadly.
鈥淭his could not have been a more stark example of something that should not happen,鈥 said Ruth Lowenkron of . 鈥淭he young man himself called 911 for help. Here鈥檚 someone thinking he鈥檚 going to get help and feel better, and instead he鈥檚 killed within moments of the police arriving. There really aren鈥檛 words to describe it.鈥
His death is the 20th killing of a mentally ill person by police in the city since 2015, Lowenkron said 鈥 a number that doesn鈥檛 include those who鈥檝e been injured, arrested or committed to a hospital over family鈥檚 objections.
Wednesday鈥檚 incident played out over just a couple minutes, according to police.
Both the 19-year-old Rozario, in the throes of a mental health episode, and his mother called 911, a police official said.
This wasn鈥檛 the first time 鈥 cops had twice before responded to calls from the family. In October, Rozario had been transported to a hospital after medical personnel had responded to the home.
Around 1:40 p.m., police arrived at the residence and knocked at the door. Within two minutes after they were let in, Rozario had the scissors in his hand, a police official said.
鈥淚t just spiraled out of control,鈥 the official said.
The officers tasered him, and his mom hugged him and pulled out one of the prongs, police said. Rozario then picked up the pair of kitchen scissors and came at the cops 鈥 who then shot at him, according to police.
The NYPD won鈥檛 name the officers or how many shots each fired.
The incident is still being investigated and no body-cam footage has yet been released. It鈥檚 unclear if the officers have been involved in prior shootings. Neither have been disciplined, a police official said.
Civil rights attorney Joel Berger, who spent nearly a decade as an executive in the 黑料正能量 City Law Department monitoring police misconduct, said the incident 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 add up.鈥
鈥淭wo cops ought to be able to disarm or at least resolve the situation without having to shoot the kid dead,鈥 he added. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a household pair of scissors.鈥
Berger urged folks suffering mental health crises to not call the police, saying the police should be 鈥渢he very last resort.鈥
Advocates say Rozario鈥檚 death highlights the potentially devastating consequences of police responses to mental health emergencies.
鈥淲in called 911 in mental distress, but instead of receiving the help he needed, he was shot and killed at his home by police after an altercation,鈥 said Councilwoman Lynn Schulman, who represents Ozone Park. 鈥淚nstead of a police response, mental health professionals should have been sent to him.鈥
The Behavioral Health Emergency Assistance Response Division, , was one solution to this. The program aims to deescalate crises by sending teams of FDNY EMTs, paramedics and social workers to instead of cops.
鈥淭hat would be the perfect instance where this health response would come in to deescalate the mental health crisis,鈥 Lowenkron said. 鈥淚f they felt there was any severe imminent threat of injury then they would call the police in as backup.鈥
in March 2023 to 鈥 but rounds of have halted any expansion of the program beyond the 31 precincts it currently serves. The city currently has no plans on expanding it, a spokesman said.
The program never reached Ozone Park, where Rozario鈥檚 fatal shooting by cops occurred.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 need to be this ultramilitarized, kind of harsh response,鈥 said Jordyn Rosenthal, director of advocacy at Community Access.
Other services, Rosenthal said, are also lacking.
鈥淭his is an issue where a Band-Aid fix is not going to make a difference. We need stitches or reconstructive surgery,鈥 Rosenthal said, adding that more mental health services like respite centers and clubhouses are needed.
With Julian Roberts-Grmela