How a viral video exposed a disturbing and little-known police tactic
In the video, five men are huddled on top of the body of Johnell Muhammad, who is laying on a busy New York City sidewalk. His head is tilted to one side, and his legs are bound together with orange straps. His arms are tied behind his back.
Then, in an instant, something strange happens. The police officers lift Muhammad and place him onto a white cloth. Holding his arms and legs, they keep him centered on the cloth and zip it up. Muhammad’s head is now wrapped up inside what looks to be a body bag. Only his feet are sticking out as officers walk away from the scene, carrying him inside.
“You got a name for that?” asks the anonymous man who videotaped the encounter. “Whatever that body bag kind of thing you just put a human being in, like he’s a fucking animal?”
The emergence of this expletive-laden video has caused a stir in New York’s mental health community since it was uploaded in March. The mentally ill or otherwise emotionally disabled are already stigmatized enough, these experts say—why wrap them in body bags in public view?Advocates are also wondering where the hell these devices came from. The New York Times reported that the videotaped incident was not actually as rare an event as it might have seemed. The New York City Police Department confirmed with Fusion that the bags, known as a “mesh restraining device,” have been used a total of 122 times from the beginning of January through April 20 of this year.
That comes out to a rate of nearly once a day. Separately, the department claims that it has been using the bags for nearly 25 years. The bags are used “to safely and effectively restrain violent or potentially violent emotionally disturbed persons who are at risk to potentially harm themselves, members of the public and/or police officers and emergency medical personnel,” reads a statement from the police department.
All of this comes as a big surprise for people who spend their careers tracking this stuff.
“The NYPD says they’ve been using it for 25 years; I don’t believe it,” Carla Rabinowitz, an advocacy coordinator for Community Access, an NYC-based mental health group, told Fusion. “Or if that’s true, then they’re using it much more often now.”
The NYPD says they’ve been using it for 25 years; I don’t believe it. — Carla Rabinowitz, advocacy coordinator, Community Access
Her group has been working with the NYPD to give officers classes in Crisis Intervention Training (CIT), a framework and policing tactic that calls on officers to de-escalate potentially volatile situations with the mentally ill or emotionally disturbed. (The mentally ill are, among other things, more likely to be killed by police during heated interactions. CIT training aims to cool down those situations and get people the treatment they need before dragging them into the justice system in handcuffs.)