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Officers in CA Have Stopped Responding to Some Calls Over Fear of ‘Suicide by Cop’ Cases

Plumas County Sheriff's Coroner Greg Hagwood appears in a 2019 photo. The county is not the only jurisdiction in California that is rethinking how it responds to suicide calls because of the potential dangers to both officers and the people attempting to end their lives. (Credit: Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)

Before George Quinn wrapped a chain around the rafters of his wood shop and hanged himself in June , he texted his big sister goodbye.

“This is the hardest part,” wrote the reclusive 63-year-old master carpenter, who lived alone with his elderly cat, Sam, in this Northern California mountain town. “Sorry for everything. You should call the Plumas Co sheriff and have them go to the garage.”

Carol Quinn dialed law enforcement from her home near Reno, more than an hour away, desperate for them to save her brother’s life.

The answer she received was startling: Deputies were no longer responding to calls like hers, because the situation could end as a “suicide by cop.”

Read the full story on LATimes.com.

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