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Illinois police chief blames officers’ suicides on ‘weakness’

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Supervisors have handed out fliers reminding officers of the employee assistance program, Greathouse said, and reminders of the program have been installed on the department’s computer monitors.

“We’re in a fight, and we need to fight with everything we have,” he said.

On Jan. 17, Greathouse emailed employees to say he’d spoken with a Tribune reporter and asked them to be cautious when talking about the suicides. He said the Tribune had “tawdry” details.

Two days later, an officer emailed Greathouse to plead with the chief to improve morale and “please do something to change the atmosphere in this police department.”

That night, Greathouse wrote back that the suicides weren’t related to job pressures. He said Michaels “probably had the least stressful job on the department,” Sturtevant had been out with an injury and Jacobs was a “solid officer” happy with his shift.

After citing weakness and selfishness, Greathouse said officers bear responsibility for their own happiness.

“In my humble opinion, that’s why this country is so screwed up these days,” he wrote. “This younger generation wants everyone else to solve their problems for them, make them happy and clear the easy path for them.”

Lisa Sturtevant said Greathouse’s description of her husband as weak and selfish was not fair, and Rohloff, the union leader, said the comments were inappropriate. The union took a vote of no confidence against Greathouse in 2011, and Rohloff said he still favors the chief’s removal.

The chief’s statement about weakness was “horrible,” said Robert Douglas, executive director of the National Police Suicide Foundation. People don’t kill themselves because they’re weak or selfish, he said, but because they don’t see another way to stop their pain. He noted that U.S. servicemen and women have been committing suicide in record numbers.

“Would you ever, ever describe them in the form that this chief has described (the three officers)?” he asked.

Greathouse told the Tribune he came from an “old school” generation of police who viewed mental health care skeptically. But he said he’d learned a lot about suicide since the three deaths.

“I still believe that striving to maintain mental wellness is as much a person’s responsibility as maintaining one’s physical fitness and healthy eating. … However, we must do everything we can to provide the proper resources to help our officers fight this killer,” he wrote in an email to the Tribune.

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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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