Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Police autism awareness training in focus

Advocates highlight importance during Acceptance month

- By Katie Rice Orlando Sentinel

Two years ago, Dawn Turnage’s 18-yearold son Justin walked away from a local pool and into a Best Buy at the Waterford Lakes Town Center, dripping wet and wearing only his underwear.

Turnage called 911 after realizing Justin was missing and informed a dispatcher he has autism and is nonverbal. The dispatcher guided her to a nearby Best Buy, where another caller had reported someone matching his descriptio­n.

When she showed up, she saw a dozen Orange County deputies in the parking lot, one of which was retrieving what looked like a bean bag rifle from his car, Turnage said. She ran up to the officer and explained that her son has autism.The dispatcher relayed the same informatio­n to other officers.

“They just walked through the store with him, nice and calm,” Turnage said. “And when I got there, they let me take over and get him safely into my car. So that’s an experience that could have gone horribly, horribly wrong.”

Turnage said all of her son’s experience­s with local law enforcemen­t have been positive, and she credits that to police autism awareness training conducted by advocacy

All major Central Florida law enforcemen­t agencies require autism-centric training and mandate or encourage refresher training every few years, a survey conducted by the Orlando Sentinel of the largest law enforcemen­t agencies in Orange, Seminole, Osceola and Lake counties found.

organizati­ons like the Autism Society of Greater Orlando.

Florida requires law enforcemen­t agencies to have some autism-related training. Legislatio­n passed in 2017 required the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t to create standard courses on autism awareness training, but local agencies determine what training they require for officers, FDLE spokespers­on Dana Kelly said.

The legislatio­n was filed after a North Miami police officer shot a Black, unarmed behavioral therapist who was complying with orders while trying to help an autistic patient back to a group home. The officer later said he was aiming at the autistic Hispanic man Charles Kinsey was caring for, mistaking ArnaldoRio­s-Sotos’silvertoy truck for a gun despite being told it was a toy.

Autism advocates maintain that extreme examples of negative police interactio­n are rare and hope that by providing training to officers — including curriculum focusing on the intersecti­on of race and autism, some say — they can ensure officers receptivel­y approach all encounters in a safer way for the entire community.

“I have more confidence in the police [after attending ASGO’s training],” Turnage said. “These officers have been trained. They know how to interact with Justin.”

’I knew as a cop that we were not properly trained’

All major Central Florida law enforcemen­t agencies require autism-centric training and mandate or encourage refresher training every few years, a survey conducted by the Orlando Sentinel of the largest law enforcemen­t agencies in Orange, Seminole, Osceola and Lake counties found.

Some agencies, like Kissimmee and Sanford’s police department­s and the Lake County Sheriff ’s Office, repeat autism-specific training annually.

Locally, organizati­ons like ASGO and the University of Central Florida’s Center for Autism and Related Disabiliti­es provide free training year-round to ensure officers recognize the behaviors exhibited by people on the autism spectrum and learn how to respond to them.

UCF CARD has trained agencies from all seven counties in Central Florida, director Terri Daly said in an email, including the Mount Dora Police Department and the Seminole County Sheriff ’s Office.

The organizati­on started conducting training in 2000 after realizing people with autism were “treated as mentally ill or dangerous by law enforcemen­t” because they didn’t understand signs of autism, Daly wrote.

The organizati­on’s goal was to help parents of children with autism feel comfortabl­e calling law enforcemen­t for support in critical situations, she said.

The daylong training includes an overview of common autism characteri­stics, scenario-based discussion and interactio­ns with people with autism and their family members.

Though autism presents itself differentl­y in everyone, people with autism may be nonverbal, or they may engage in self-stimulator­y, or “stimming,” behaviors like flapping their hands, vocalizing or moving repetitive­ly.

Amy Fritz-Ocock, a speech-language pathologis­t with UCF CARD before starting a private practice last year, said it encourages officers to keep a calm demeanor and allow extra time for language processing.

UCF CARD also educates people with autism how to respond to emergent situations and encourages families to interact with law enforcemen­t to build familiarit­y and trust.

“It’s really about both teaching autistic individual­s strategies to effectivel­y communicat­e their needs and seek support, as well as training the officers themselves,” Fritz-Ocock said.

Donna Lorman, ASGO’s president, said she has helped train over 38,000 officers from 225 different agencies across Florida over the past decade, including most Central Florida agencies. She and Det. Hector Gonzalez of the Bal Harbour Police Department created a constantly evolving curriculum that runs eight hours and uses lectures, videos, scenarios and engagement with volunteers with autism, Lorman said.

“We talk a lot about, ‘How do you recognize someone with autism?’ because autism doesn’t look like anything; it behaves like something,” she said. “If you don’t recognize it, you’ll never implement any of the other strategies.”

Lorman and Gonzalez are parents of autistic men and realized the need for large-scale autism awareness training through their experience­s with their sons.

“I knew as a cop that we were not properly trained, and as a father I was afraid because the cops weren’t properly trained,” Gonzalez said.

Lorman started looking into training resources when her son Drew was 5, after his principal threatened to have him arrested and charged with battery after a kindergart­en incident, she said. Recently Drew, now 29, was using a swing in a local park when a neighbor called deputies on him for looking suspicious.

“The responding officer got out of his car and goes, ‘Hey, Drew!’ He knew him because he took the training,” Lorman said.

Turnage said her son Justin’s experience participat­ing in the training was eye-opening. She and her husband noted how several officers initially thought Justinwas being “difficult” when not responding to questions before realizing he does not talk, she said.

ASGO has continued conducting training during the pandemic with smaller groups, more safety measures and fewer volunteers. And feedback from officers remains overwhelmi­ngly positive.

“We don’t get any poor feedback at all,” Lorman said. “Most say, ‘We wish we had it earlier in our career. This should be in the academy.’ [It’s the] best training they’ve ever had.”

Beyond training, several agencies — like the sheriff ’s offices in Orange and Seminole counties and the police department­s in Ocoee and Altamonte Springs— provide registrati­on programs for residents with special needs.

Families can register relatives with autism so their address or loved one is flagged within agency databases ahead of police contact. Some agencies also offer medical ID bracelets or tracking devices to people with special needs.

Orange Sheriff John Mina on Friday announced a program to provide families with an “Occupant with Autism” sticker, which can be placed on windows of vehicles or homes to help inform emergency responders.

Advocates and parents of people with autism say such voluntary registrati­on programs are largely beneficial, and many have already registered with them.

“Allowing law enforcemen­t to have all the facts handy, I feel, would help them assess the situation better and utilize alternativ­e de-escalation methods,” wrote Diana Ocasio, of Lakeland, whose 12-year-old son Jaylen has autism.

But databases could also raise confidenti­ality and trust concerns for families, said Maria Davis-Pierre, president and CEO of Autism in Black in Lake Worth.

These systems could be misused, she said, and she would not personally sign her children up for it.

“We wouldn’t be sure of how this data would be used against them,” she wrote in an email. “... Law enforcemen­t agencies need biases training, community-based public safety models, anti-racism training, and trainings on interactin­g with the disability community.

“Until these root issues are addressed a database will not solve much.”

Calls for racial justice underscore need for intersecti­onal training

Neither UCF CARD nor ASGO has seen an increased demand for training over the past year amid calls for police reform and racial justice, Daly and Lorman said.

Gonzalez, with ASGO, said the training has “exploded” in popularity this year due to delays caused by the COVID19 pandemic and an increase in autism acceptance rather than police reform.

“I don’t think what’s happened in the world, or in the country … has increased the interest for autism [training] at all,” he said.

The role race plays in interactio­ns with police is not addressed in ASGO’s training, Gonzalez said.

UCF CARD’s training has always addressed the intersecti­on of race and autism, including that autism spectrum disorder is often under-identified in communitie­s of color, but its curriculum has not changed recently, Daly wrote.

Davis-Pierre trains organizati­ons about the intersecti­on of race and disability and said agencies should first receive culturally responsive instructio­n on Black communitie­s and then discus race and disability in their autism training.

“You have to be trained on how to deal with Black people first,” Davis-Pierre said. “That’s what you see first, especially when we’re talking about autism because it’s not so visible.”

Calls for police reform and racial justice have renewed interest in police autism awareness training in her experience, she said, but she has seen little followthro­ugh.

“In some instances, it’s performati­ve of putting on the act that you want to change, but not really wanting to do that type of work because it is quite transforma­tive,” she said. “In the wake of all of this uprising, this is the time to actually put footwork behind that talk.”

Parents of Black children with autism also have to explain to their children their behaviors may be automatica­lly labeled suspicious, she said.

“We can’t quite give tools to say, ‘This is what you do to not look suspicious’ because we know that our skin tone alone heightens police officers,” she said. “People automatica­lly don’t associate autism with the Black community. It’s always going to be [seen as] a behavior issue.”

Two of Davis-Pierre’s three young children have autism, and she and her husband have already discussed safe police interactio­ns with them.

“[We tell them,] ‘Community helpers may not always help us, and it’s because of our skin tone,’ ” she said. “So trying to navigate those conversati­ons with two 5-year-olds and an 8-year-old, and bringing it to their level is quite difficult. But we also are put in tough spots as Black parents.”

Ocasio said she is relieved local law enforcemen­t receives autism-centric training but wants to know officers are trained on the intersecti­on of race and autism. She worries how her Black and Hispanic son’s racial background might affect future encounters with police.

Jaylen has received resources on police interactio­n through UCF CARD, but Ocasio is unsure how he would respond in a stressful situation.

“He does not really talk to strangers,” Ocasio said. “So our concern was always, if he was in a situation where a law enforcemen­t officer approached him, for whatever reason, he wouldn’t speak to them or he’d kind of just shut down. … We don’t want them to misconstru­e that as something else when he’s just not comfortabl­e.”

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF DONNA LORMAN ?? Chris Gonzalez, left, and Drew Lorman stand in front of a Bal Harbour police car that is decorated for autism awareness.
PHOTO COURTESY OF DONNA LORMAN Chris Gonzalez, left, and Drew Lorman stand in front of a Bal Harbour police car that is decorated for autism awareness.

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