Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Home where boy was shot to death by at least 1 deputy had 5 previous calls seeking mental health assistance

- By Hunter Lee hlee@scng.com

Authoritie­s had previously responded to five mental health calls since January at the Apple Valley home of a 15-year-old boy who was fatally shot by at least one deputy over the weekend, San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus said during a Wednesday news conference, calling the teen's death a failure of the “social safety net.”

Deputies were called to the residence in the 13400 block of Iroquois Road on Saturday after a family member reported the teen was attempting to attack people in the home, according to a partial 911 call released by the Sheriff's Department. The woman on the call told dispatch that the teen, Ryan Gainer, was hitting his sister.

“They've got to take him in, they've got to,” the woman told dispatch, adding that the teen had broken a window in the home and had a piece of glass near his neck. A loud commotion could be heard in the background.

When the first arriving deputy attempted to enter the front door, Gainer began charging toward him with a 5-foot long garden tool with a bladed edge, body-worn camera footage release by authoritie­s on Wednesday shows.

With his gun raised, the deputy shouted, “Hey get back! Get back or you're gonna get shot!”

Meanwhile, the deputy attempted to retreat outside the house.

But Gainer continues to run toward the deputy, still armed with the tool, as the deputy turns around, his torso facing the boy, aiming his gun behind him, the footage shows.

A second deputy arrived just as Gainer and the first deputy leave the house, and at least three rounds were then fired by the deputies, Dicus said.

Family members then rushed out of the house, with

some shouting at deputies, “why would you shoot my baby?” and “where was your Taser?”

Deputies attempted to perform life-saving measures on Gainer, who was pronounced dead at the scene.

An attorney representi­ng the family, Dewitt Lacy, previously told KABC Channel 7 that Gainer had autism and was acting out after a dispute over doing household chores.

“Ryan is a 15-year-old with autism, and sometimes in order to release stress or if he he’s a little too worked up, he’ll go on a run,” Lacy told KABC. “When he came back, there was a dispute that arose because he wanted to play video games, and he needed to do his chores, and he started acting out.”

Lacy did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Responding to criticism of the shooting, Dicus said the deputy only had seconds to react, regardless of whether he was aware Gainer had autism.

“What we really need to look at is — even if we had the best of health care, the best psychologi­sts, in that immediate interactio­n — that seven seconds,” Dicus said. “There are no magic words. We pay law enforcemen­t officers to stop threats, to stop violence.”

“We need to understand in this circumstan­ce — whether we knew, didn’t know, had the best resources available to us — this is a reactionar­y time.”

“We’ve been to this residence five times,” Dicus said.

The previous encounters between health care and law enforcemen­t personnel and Gainer this year ended each time with Gainer being taken to a mental health facility with no use of force, Dicus said.

“That’s my point of saying our social safety network is not working and needs to be strengthen­ed,” Dicus said. “There is no reason for law enforcemen­t be the ones that end up having to get involved in these crises, specifical­ly when we’ve off-ramped these individual­s to social services that are supposed to be designed to take care of their mental health needs.”

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