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Interviewing Persons with Disabilities or Mental Illness

Learn about the challenges and considerations when interviewing individuals with disabilities or mental illness. Understand the impact of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) on law enforcement and how to avoid wrongful arrest claims. Explore techniques for effective communication and identification of special care needs. Gain insight into cognitive and communication disabilities, such as mental retardation and autism, as well as mental illness.

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Interviewing Persons with Disabilities or Mental Illness

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  1. Interviewing Persons with Disabilities or Mental Illness Chapter 9 9-1

  2. Profile of the Impaired Population • Approximately 54 million Americans live with a wide variety of physical, cognitive, and emotional disabilities • One out of every ten police calls nationally involves someone who is mentally ill

  3. Victimization of the Impaired Population • Impaired adults are at a higher risk for being physically or sexually assaulted • Children with disabilities are also victimized more frequently than those without disability

  4. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) • It prohibits state and local governments from discriminating against any qualified person with a disability • An individual who, with or without reasonable modifications to rules, policies, or practices … meets the essential eligibility requirements for the receipt of services or the participation in programs or activities provided by a public entity.

  5. The Americans with Disabilities Act is a legislative mandate to provide equal protections and access of government facilities for persons who have a disability. It affects everything that officers and deputies do Receiving citizen complaints Interrogating and interviewing Arresting, booking, and holding suspects Enforcing laws Incarceration ADA is a Legislative Mandate

  6. ADA requires that government officials attempt effective communication with individuals having disabilities, but they are not required to alter the nature of the service Examples include: An interpreter The use of an auxiliary aid such as note takers, transcript services, audio recordings, or large print materials Interviewing Accommodations

  7. Examples of Auxiliary Aids • Note takers • Transcript services • Videotext displays • Closed caption decoders • Telephones compatible with hearing aids

  8. Sporadic claims against police departments for failure to train officers on handling persons with disabilities have surfaced in Federal Court Police are expected to recognize a situation where a person has a disability Police Liability Under ADA

  9. Wrongful-Arrest Claims • Jackson v. Town of Sanford (1994): A man was arrested for drunk driving but was sober. His unsteadiness and slurred speech resulted from a past stroke • Lewis v. Truitt (1997):A deaf man, who could not understand the commands of the police, was beaten and arrested by police for resisting arrest • Gohier v. Enright (1999): Arrest is being broadly interpreted to include arrests, violent confrontations not technically involving an arrest, and pre-arrest investigations

  10. Techniques to Avoid Wrongful Arrest • Noticing if there is a handicapped license plate on the car • Communicating to people in a crowd to signal that a person stop running • Speaking clearly • Using breathalyzers

  11. Initial Considerations • Self-confrontation! • Negative attitudes may be the largest impediment to successful interviewing • Speak directly to the person being interviewed, even if they are accompanied by another person • Their condition should not cause repulsion, sympathy, or admiration

  12. Disability May Be Defined Through a Variety of Cognitive and Communication Disabilities

  13. Identifying When Special Care is Needed • Communication problems can result in misleading statements or inappropriate reactions because of misunderstanding of events • Excessive apprehension or anxiety may be evident • May be incoherent not due to drug or alcohol

  14. Mental Retardation — a Developmental Disability • Persons with mental retardation possess less than average ability to process information • 2 percent to 10 percent of the prison population • Some may not be able to understand or answer questions

  15. Persons with Mental Retardation • Will exhibit a mood level that is inconsistent with the situation • Have a short attention span • Have a limited vocabulary • May have a speech impediment • Have unusual behavior traits or agitation accompanied by physical activity may also present itself • Verbal and nonverbal behaviors may include yelling, biting, hugging, rubbing of genital areas, or breasts

  16. Autism • Frequently occurs along with other mental impairments, such as mental retardation, seizure disorders, and attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder • Characterized by impaired social relations and communication deficits which may lead to behavior prohibited by law • They may become aggressive if interrupted during a preferred activity

  17. Mental Illness Defined • Mental illness is a clinically significant behavioral or psychological syndrome or pattern that occurs in an individual and that is associated with present distress (e.g., a painful symptom) or disability (i.e., impairment in one or more important areas of functioning) or with a significant increased risk of suffering death, pain, disability, or an important loss of freedom

  18. Mental Illness vs. Mental Retardation • Persons Having Mental Illness and Mental Retardation are Highly Represented in the CJ System: they are not the same!

  19. Categories of Severe Mental Illness • These are highly represented in the prison population • Schizophrenia • Bipolar disorder • Serious depression

  20. Schizophrenia • Three to six times greater in the prison population versus the general population • This complex disease may include disordered thinking or speech, delusions, hallucinations, inappropriate emotions, confusion, withdrawal, and inattention to personal grooming

  21. Persons with Schizophrenia • Individuals with this mental disorder may present with anxiety, anger, and aloofness; argumentativeness, along with a superior or patronizing manner • May be quick to anger, provocative, and dangerous

  22. Bipolar Disorder • Bipolar disorder (previously called manic-depressive disorder) is characterized by frequent dramatic mood swings from depression to mania

  23. Persons with Bipolar Disorder • During manic phases some people may be psychotic and may experience delusions or hallucinations • In a manic phase can be disruptive, quick to anger, provocative, and dangerous

  24. Serious Depression • Puts people at an increased risk for suicide and self-mutilation

  25. The Property was the Prisoner’s Own Body • In October 2001, a prisoner at Georgia’s Phillips State prison who was mentally ill and had an extensive history of self-mutilation, heard the murder of another prisoner, David Strickland, at the hands of his cellmate in a nearby cell. The prisoner “responded to the stress by cutting himself,” and was subsequently given a disciplinary report and placed in an isolation cell for “destruction of state property”

  26. The DSM-IV Defines a Personality Disorder as: • An enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual’s culture, is pervasive and inflexible, has an onset in adolescence or early adulthood, is stable over time, and leads to distress or impairment

  27. Personality Disorder • The most prevalent personality disorders among jail and prison inmates are anti-social personality disorder (ASPD) and borderline personality disorder

  28. Antisocial Personality Disorder • Persons with antisocial personality disorder, typically men, can be particularly difficult to manage in a correctional setting • They can often be manipulative, volatile, disruptive, and likely to engage in aggressive, impulsive “acting out” behavior which can include assaults on others, self-mutilation, and/or suicide attempts

  29. Borderline Personality Disorder • The essential feature of the former is a pervasive pattern of disregard for, and violation of, the rights of others

  30. Distant Field Evaluation • Distant field evaluation • Nonverbal assessment conducted from a distance over 3 feet • Inappropriate dress • Stumbling or appearing confused • Inappropriate actions with others • Appears gravely disabled

  31. Detailed Field Evaluation • Detailed field evaluation • Up close to determine if there are problems that must be addressed • Show of respect and non-threatening approach

  32. Interview Considerations • Although these interviews may be challenging, they involve only a modification of techniques • A cycle of victimization and abuse will make it more difficult to establish rapport • Be patient • Understanding

  33. Legal Issues • Research the statutes that are specific to protecting disabled persons in your state • Elements of the crime may be different

  34. Protections • Specific statutes exist that protect persons • Having disabilities • Who are mentally incapacitated • Having mental disabilities • Having physical disabilities • Specific statutes exist that protect the property of special populations

  35. Select a location that is quiet and without distractions Turn off cell phone or pager One-on-one interview is preferred Prepare for the Interview

  36. Communications • Appropriate adult may be needed • Someone who is able to provide support and smooth the progress of communication with police • Facilitated communication may be needed • A trained facilitator assists with a keyboard or communication board, steadying the physical movements of the person so that they can make movements

  37. Do not phrase questions in legal terms Do not infantilize Keep sentences short and to the point Avoid asking “why” Attempt consistency in communications Avoid leading questions and questions that can be answered with “yes” or “no” If possible, no longer than 30 minutes Confirm vocabulary Communication During the Interview

  38. Speak directly to the interviewee with respect Ask the person what they would like to be called Don’t assume the person wants or needs help Keep clear of wheelchairs Avoid touching the person May be touch toxic May feel as though they can’t refuse the touch If inappropriate touching occurs, firmly and gently avoid personal contact Methods for Establishing Rapport

  39. Conducting the Interview • Attempt consistency in communications • Avoid leading questions and questions that can be answered with yes or no • If possible, no longer than 30 minutes • Confirm vocabulary • Avoid asking “why”

  40. Interrogation Considerations • Make a determination on the level of functioning of the suspect • Can they read, write, answer simple questions? • Follow up statements suggestive of guilt by asking for details • Verify that the accused understands what is being said

  41. Provide the suspect with his or her Miranda Rights which is required for all interrogations of persons in custody There is no requirement that Miranda rights be given verbatim Explain in a manner consistent with the needs of the suspect Miranda Warnings

  42. Interrogations of individuals with a mental retardation is a concern There is a link between low IQ and false confessions Avoid unnecessarily lengthy interrogations Persons having mental retardation usually want to please police officers and may incriminate themselves even when innocent of any crime False Confessions

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