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Illinois police chief blames officers’ suicides on ‘weakness’

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“He would have said that, you know, ‘If I were ever to go to counseling or seek help or whatever, people would think I was crazy, and they wouldn’t think I could do my job as well and they wouldn’t respect me,’ ” Lisa Sturtevant said.

The first to take his life was Officer Mark Jacobs, who died of a gunshot wound in his Palatine, Ill., home in May 2011, according to a Cook County Medical Examiner’s office report.

Less than 11 months later, Sturtevant, 43, hanged himself in a co-worker’s Gurnee, Ill., home, where he’d sometimes stayed when having family problems toward the end of his life, according to the Lake County coroner’s office. He left behind a 21-year-old daughter and a 12-year-old son, his family said. He was the third son to commit suicide in a family of three brothers and two sisters, his mother said.

On Jan. 10, Sgt. Peter Michaels, 42, was found dead of a gunshot wound in a wooded area near Antioch, Ill., authorities said. The coroner’s office has not ruled on the cause, but his death appears to have been a suicide, said Wayne Hunter, chief deputy of the Lake County sheriff’s office. Michaels had a wife and two daughters, according to an obituary.

Their colleagues are reeling from one loss after another, said Officer Chris Rohloff, president of the union that represents Waukegan patrol officers.

“Everyone is in grief, and it seems like every time you get out of grief, there’s another one,” he said.

Jacobs’ family declined to comment. Michaels’ family could not be reached.

With three deaths during a 20-month span, the 141-officer department’s recent suicide rate is vastly higher than the general population’s. The U.S. suicide rate was 12.4 per 100,000 in 2010 — or slightly more than one suicide for every 10,000 people, according to figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A reliable rate for police is elusive, as there is no nationwide system of reporting, police mental health advocates said. A soon-to-be-released national study relying on online reports and information from agencies puts the rate for officers in 2012 at about 16 suicides per 100,000 people, said one of the study’s authors, John Violanti, a University at Buffalo research professor.

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mvhii wrote on February 9, 2013 7:42 a.m. ...
As a trainer in police suicide prevention, I would recommend that readers look at Dr. Thomas Joyner's research (USF) that contradicts the stigma of suicide as a weak, cowardly act. I commend the writer of this article who brings out another barrier to addressing the problem of police suicide--no accurate reporting mechanism. How can we solve a problem if we don't know the scope of the problem? Many people have been impacted by the suicide death of an officer, but we only have anecdotal data. Researchers like Dr. Violanti and Andy O'Hara are excellent resources worthy of our support.

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