Dayton Daily News

Fifth NYPD officer since June dies by suicide, police say

- Mihir Zaveri ©2019 The New York Times

A New York police officer was found dead at his Staten Island home Saturday after shooting himself in what was the fifth police suicide in the city since June, officials said.

Officials did not imme- diately release the officer’s name, rank or tenure with the department; however, the Sergeants Benevolent Associatio­n said on Twitter that it was a sergeant who had died.

“Once again terrible news,” the message said. “Tonight the NYPD lost a sergeant to suicide. We ask that everyone pray for his family, friends and Co-workers. The NYPD continues to go through a difficult time.”

The news underscore­d the Police Department’s ongo- ing struggles with mental health. More police officers commit suicide every year in New York City than are killed in the line of duty. (Since 2014, an average of five New York City police officers have taken their own lives each year, according to the Police Department.)

On June 5, Deputy Chief Steven Silks shot himself in his police vehicle. The next day, Detective Joseph Calabrese took his own life. Officer Michael Caddy fatally shot himself near his Staten Island precinct station house June 14, and on June 26, Offi- cer Kevin Preiss was found dead at his home in Long Island.

In June, Commission­er James O’Neill declared a mental-health crisis and told offi- cers they could get confiden- tial help from department chaplains, from peer-support groups and from phone and text message hotlines.

O’Neill reiterated in a state- ment Saturday that “it is okay to seek help from others.”

“The tragic news today that another member of the NYPD has been lost to suicide breaks our hearts, and is a deep sorrow felt by all of New York City,” the statement said. “To every member of the NYPD, please know this: it is okay to feel vulnerable.”

But Robert Louden, a professor emeritus of criminal justice and homeland security at Georgian Court University in New Jersey, said that officers often believe they are supposed to provide help — not seek it themselves.

“The nature of the person- ality is that it’s a sign of weak- ness, it’s a sign of shame, to go for help,” he said Saturday. “That kind of holds them back.”

Louden, who was a member of the Police Department for more than 20 years, said the suicides in New York mirrored police suicides across the country this year.

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