Melissa Boarts’s family
was frantic to find her.
They said the 36-year-old suffered
from manic depression and had been threatening to slit her wrists
when she jumped into her car Sunday and went for a drive down
Interstate 85, toward Auburn, Ala.
Her twin told the Montgomery Advertiser that
she started tracking her sister’s movements via GPS and calling
out the route to their parents. At one point, they caught a
glimpse of her SUV before she disappeared.
Finally, she stopped.
“We were afraid she was going to
hurt herself,” her mother, Terry Boarts, told the newspaper. “We figured
she was going to bleed out right there.”
The parents called 911 for
help.
But instead of assisting, “police
ended up putting a bullet in her,” they said in a statement issued by the
family’s attorney.
Auburn police said Melissa
Boarts charged at them with an unidentified weapon Sunday, prompting
an officer to open fire and kill her.
Now the family is pursuing legal
action.
Julian McPhillips, the attorney
for the family, told The Washington Post on Tuesday that the
parents believe Boarts may have had a pocket knife — “but certainly
no gun” — and argued that shooting her was “totally unjustified.”
“They are all deeply
mourning and deeply hurt,” McPhillips said of her family.
Boarts is one of at least 262 people
who have been fatally shot by police so far in 2016, according to a Washington Post database. At least
41 of those killed by police were carrying a knife or other blade, and about a
quarter of all police shooting victims were mentally ill or experiencing an
emotional crisis.
People with untreated mental illness
are 16 times as likely to be killed during a police encounter as other
civilians approached or stopped by law enforcement, according to a study from
the Treatment Advocacy Center.
McPhillips said the Boarts family
intends to pursue the case “very vigorously,” demanding dash-camera and
body-camera footage from the scene.
“It’s difficult to get true
justice,” he said, “because you can’t bring somebody back to life.”
After Melissa Boarts disappeared
Sunday, her mother went looking for her, with her 2-year-old granddaughter in
tow.
“We were able to find out she was
headed on the interstate going to Auburn,” Terry Boarts told the Montgomery
Advertiser. “She was threatening to slit her wrists with a knife.”
Terry Boarts told the newspaper
that she called police and told them her daughter was “having mental
issues — that she was bipolar, that she had been really depressed, that
she was saying she was going to cut her wrists.”
She said she told the authorities
that her daughter had a knife.
Auburn police said officers
responded at about 3:40 p.m. to a call about a suicidal motorist on Interstate
85 and followed the vehicle until the driver stopped on Red
Creek Road in Macon County.
Police said she “exited the vehicle
armed with a weapon and charged the officers in a threatening manner at which
time the officers discharged their weapons, striking the driver.”
The Macon County Coroner told Al.com that Boarts died from a
single gunshot wound.
Police vehicles, a helicopter
and ambulances swarmed the scene, according to reports.
The Boarts family told the
Montgomery Advertiser they were informed there had been a fatality.
“We’re still assuming the road ended
and she hit a tree,” Terry Boarts told the newspaper. “They never told us she
had been shot.”
The woman’s twin
sister, Melinda Boarts, said police finally came back and said “they
shot her.”
Her father, Michael Boarts, who
worked 25 years as an officer for the Alabama Department of Corrections,
said it was “absolutely outrageous.”
“There was absolutely no
justification for it and we are all in deep mourning,” Michael Boarts said
in the statement through the family’s attorney.
Since January 2015, The Post has
tracked more than 1,100 fatal shootings by on-duty police officers, with one in
four involving someone who was either in the midst of a mental health crisis or
was explicitly suicidal. A Post analysis has found that in half of those cases,
the officers involved were not properly trained to deal with the mentally ill —
and in many cases, officers responded with tactics that quickly made a volatile
situation even more dangerous.
Auburn police called it a
“tragedy for the Boarts family as well as the officers involved.”
“Officers within the Auburn Police
Division have encountered thousands of situations involving those with weapons
or individuals intending to harm themselves,” police said in a statement. “It
has been nearly 40 years since an Auburn Police Officer was required to use
force that ended in the death of another. It is unfortunate when someone
intends to harm themselves and involves law enforcement to do so.
“Officers within the Auburn Police Division
are trained to deal with disturbed individuals and have experience in doing
so.”
The State Bureau of Investigations,
Macon County Sheriff’s Department and Macon County Coroner’s Office are
investigating the incident, according to news reports. Findings will be
released to the Macon County District Attorney. [Washington post]
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