No ‘reason For This To End Bad’: Witness Says Police Didn’t Need To Kill Mentally Ill Man

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A for­mer police/​community liai­son said he believes Sunday’s fatal shoot­ing by an Indianapolis offi­cer should have end­ed dif­fer­ent­ly, and he is call­ing for a response from the city’s leadership.

Gregory Meriweather, a for­mer may­oral can­di­date, was vis­it­ing friends near the 4500 block of Woodland Drive dur­ing the stand­off between Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department offi­cers and a man with a machete.

Meriweather, who has almost 7,000 fol­low­ers on Facebook, livestreamed the stand­off and sub­se­quent shooting.

I want­ed to be in the posi­tion of pro­tect­ing that indi­vid­ual, but also to let law enforce­ment know there was some­one on the scene mon­i­tor­ing what they were doing,” said Meriweather, whose videos had been watched more than 10,000 times as of Monday afternoon.

The man killed was iden­ti­fied as Kendall Darnell Gilbert, 40, by the Marion County Coroner’s Office.

Officers were dis­patched to the home at about 6:45 p.m. Sunday to check the wel­fare of a woman. The woman pushed an emer­gency alert but­ton and said some­one was try­ing to kill her, said Lt. Shane Foley, a spokesper­son for the police department.

Officers were famil­iar with the peo­ple involved as police had been at the home mul­ti­ple times over the week­end for men­tal-health relat­ed calls, Foley said.

Videos show confrontation

Meriweather’s Facebook videos showed Gilbert stand­ing near a mail­box at the end of a dri­ve­way in the neigh­bor­hood on the city’s north­west side. Gilbert was hold­ing a machete, some­times point­ing it at and threat­en­ing offi­cers, while also hold­ing a large stick in por­tions of the videos, which are near­ly two hours long.

The videos show nego­tia­tors try­ing to speak with Gilbert and an armored vehi­cle arriv­ing. Toward the end of the video, sev­er­al loud bangs and what appears to be a taser deploy­ing are heard before gun­shots ring out. Gilbert then falls to the ground near a police vehi­cle. Paramedics began treat­ing Gilbert. He died at a hos­pi­tal, accord­ing to police.

Meriweather pre­vi­ous­ly worked as a com­mu­ni­ty ini­tia­tives strate­gist under for­mer IMPD Chief Bryan Roach.

I did­n’t see a rea­son for this to end bad,” Meriweather said. “I did­n’t see a rea­son for him to end up with a bul­let in him.”

He believes offi­cers could have let Gilbert tire him­self out or used tear gas to sub­due him.

From ear­li­er this month: An ‘egre­gious pat­tern’: Group, fam­i­ly demand trans­paren­cy after offi­cer shoots, kills man

There is no doubt the death of Mr. Gilbert is a tragedy,” IMPD said in a state­ment. “For 48 hours, IMPD Officers worked to peace­ful­ly resolve the sit­u­a­tion, deploy­ing less-lethal tac­tics and a psy­chol­o­gist with the Crisis Negotiation Unit was on-scene. Despite those mea­sures, Mr. Gilbert moved towards offi­cers with a machete in-hand. At that point, offi­cers dis­charged their weapons.”

No offi­cers or oth­er res­i­dents were hurt. The offi­cer who dis­charged his firearm is a 28-year vet­er­an of the depart­ment and has been placed on admin­is­tra­tive leave, Foley said, which is stan­dard pro­to­col dur­ing an offi­cer-involved shooting.

Mental health cost man his life, neighbor says

Donald Clark, who has lived a few doors down from where the shoot­ing hap­pened for the past 25 years, said it’s clear his neigh­bor was suf­fer­ing from seri­ous men­tal health problems.

It goes back to the lack of insti­tu­tions and help for peo­ple with men­tal health con­di­tions,” Clark said. “It’s just so sad. Someone lost their life because of men­tal illness.”

Meriweather said he wants to hear from the city’s lead­er­ship. Sunday’s shoot­ing came just days after police released an edit­ed video show­ing anoth­er man, Gary Harrell, being shot in the back while run­ning from Officer Douglas Correll with a revolver in his hand. There is no indi­ca­tion Harrell point­ed the weapon at the offi­cer as he fled before the Aug. 3 shooting.

Leaders lead when sit­u­a­tions like this hap­pen,” Meriweather said. “The may­or of this city and the chief of this city should not be qui­et with the amount of footage shown and the end result (in Sunday’s shoot­ing). When you are a leader of the gen­er­al pub­lic this is not the time to be qui­et. The peo­ple of this city deserve to hear from both of them.”

IndyStar sought com­ment from Mayor Joe Hogsett, who’s run­ning for reelec­tion, and Police Chief Randal Taylor but received only writ­ten state­ments from their respec­tive offices.

Crisis reponse team: City details new approach to men­tal health calls – with­out police

Mayor Hogsett’s office points to expanded resources

Our thoughts go out to all involved in yesterday’s inci­dent,” reads a state­ment from the city. “Over the past sev­er­al years, the City of Indianapolis has great­ly expand­ed the num­ber of emer­gency men­tal health resources to those who need them.”

The city includ­ed infor­ma­tion about its Mobile Crisis Assistance Teams (MCAT), which oper­ate from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. dur­ing the week and include a clin­i­cian and a police officer.

Clinician-Led Community Response Teams, includ­ing a clin­i­cian and a peer spe­cial­ist, also are active in the down­town dis­trict from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., sev­en days per week. Hogsett’s pro­posed 2024 bud­get includes an expan­sion of the clin­i­cian-led teams to the city’s east dis­trict. As the teams reach bud­get­ed staffing, they will shift to 24-hour oper­a­tions, accord­ing to the city’s statement.

Residents, the state­ment said, also can get men­tal health and sub­stance abuse inter­ven­tion at the Assessment and Intervention Center, which is locat­ed on the Community Justice Campus