APD Annual Reports - 2019 Annual Report | Page 50

Mental Health and Victim Advocacy The impact of crime on an individual victim, their loved ones, and their community depends on a variety of factors, but often crime victimization has significant emotional, psychological, physical, financial, and social consequences. Victim Service Counselors are available to respond on scene to assist officers with victims of domestic violence and other traumatic crime. The Victim Services Unit (VS) provides services and resources to victims and family members of victims. Services include crisis intervention, counseling, referral and assistance with the victim’s compensation. The unit has a Youth and Family Specialist (YFS) who provides targeted support for juveniles with behavioral health issues and juvenile victims of crime. The unit served 9,823 unduplicated victims in 2019. Project RAISE focuses on the intervention of the top five repeat domestic violence locations within each geographic district per month. The safety risk of each location is evaluated by monitoring the number of calls to a location, the history of violence at that location, and the severity of violence at the location. An in-depth assessment is followed by a home visit from a Co-Responder Team, which consists of a VS Counselor and a specially trained patrol officer. 50 | 2019 Annual Report Safety planning and crisis intervention is provided to the victim in order to provide a violence-free household. This team made 217 visits in 2019. Mental health issues present a challenge for law enforcement officers as they respond to incidents in the field. The department has a dedicated team to support operations and ensure officers have the resources necessary to assist community members in need. Police agencies are often the front-line responders to those struggling with a mental health crisis. In addition to staff time and resources, these are dynamic environments that have potential for harm to both staff and those involved. Our partnership with the MHMR Law Liaison project provides APD an opportunity to interject a mental health professional into these encounters, and work in conjunction with officers to achieve stabilization, develop positive rapport with law enforcement and provide connectivity to services. Mental Health Peace Officers (MHPO) on patrol are partnered with MHMR Law Liaisons to form a Co-Responder Team. They conduct follow-up services and help individuals struggling with mental health issues connect to resources. For 2019, officers responded to 5,400 calls for service that had an identified mental health component. The Co-Responder Unit provided follow-up services to 2,661 individuals and officers completed 1,609 emergency detentions. Victim Services Unit VS Department’s Existence = 33 years 12 Employees with a total of 52 years of experience Annual average services provided to victims = 60,012