Boston Officer Stabbed, Suspect Killed During Mental‑Health Crisis Call Near Northeastern
Boston police say a man in apparent psychiatric crisis stabbed an officer with a sword and knocked down a mental‑health clinician before being shot and killed by officers Saturday morning near Northeastern University, raising new questions about the city’s post‑George Floyd crisis‑response model. Commissioner Michael Cox said officers were dispatched around 10:45 a.m. after the man reported four armed people outside his apartment; unable to verify that threat, police requested EMS and a clinician from the Boston Emergency Services Team and spent 35–45 minutes trying to coax him out for treatment. According to Cox, the man suddenly emerged from the apartment with a sword, stabbing an officer in the arm and sending the clinician to the ground, after which one or more officers used a Taser and then firearms, and the man later died despite on‑scene medical care. The injured officer received a tourniquet and was hospitalized, and several other officers plus two EMS clinicians were taken to hospitals with non‑life‑threatening injuries, Suffolk District Attorney Kevin Hayden said. Boston EMS issued a statement stressing that its members "show up to save lives — not to be assaulted" and calling the episode a stark reminder of the dangers for unarmed medical and mental‑health personnel responding alongside police, even as critics and supporters of BLM‑era crisis‑response reforms are already using the case online to argue over whether current protocols adequately protect both officers and clinicians.
📌 Key Facts
- Incident occurred around 10:45 a.m. Saturday at a brownstone on Hemenway Street near Northeastern University in Boston.
- Police say they requested EMS and a BEST mental‑health clinician after determining the caller needed immediate psychiatric help and spent 35–45 minutes negotiating before the attack.
- The man allegedly emerged with a sword, stabbed a Boston officer in the arm, knocked the clinician down, and was then shot by officers; he later died despite EMS treatment.
- Suffolk DA Kevin Hayden said several officers and two EMS clinicians were hospitalized with non‑life‑threatening injuries.
- Boston EMS publicly condemned the assault, noting their members "show up to save lives — not to be assaulted."
📊 Relevant Data
Black Americans are killed by police at a rate 2.8 times higher than White Americans in encounters involving signs of mental illness, based on data from 2015-2020.
Dying at the Intersections: Police-Involved Killings of Black People with Behavioral Health Disabilities — Psychiatric Services
In the US, Black adults are less likely to receive mental health treatment compared to White adults; for example, among adults who needed mental health services, 55% of Asian and 46% of Black adults reported difficulty finding a culturally sensitive provider in 2023.
Co-responder programs pairing police with mental health professionals have been shown to reduce criminal recidivism and violence; for instance, a study found a 58% reduction in repeat offenses among participants in such programs.
Testing the Impact of a Law Enforcement–Operated Co-Response Diversion Program — Psychiatric Services
Over half of EMS clinicians in the US have experienced workplace violence, with a 2023 study reporting that 52% faced physical assaults or threats during calls, including mental health crises.
The rate and predictors of violence against EMS personnel — PMC
Police killings of unarmed Black Americans are associated with worse mental health outcomes in Black communities, contributing up to 55 million additional poor mental health days annually in the US, based on 2013-2015 data extrapolated forward.
Pain of police killings ripples outward to traumatize Black people and communities — Berkeley Public Health
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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