words by Charles Brooks
In 2026, the police response to mental health episodes of behavioral disorder continues to be an issue across the country.
The issue today comes under greater scrutiny, as headline after headline preface their stories of 911 calls…ending in death.
In different cities across the country we find similar endings occurring in Massachusetts, in New York City, in Connecticut, in Anaheim, California, and in Fort Wayne, Michigan. These are just a handful of the most recent examples as folks grapple with addressing the police response to mental health crises.
In Baltimore City where mistrust of police remains high, the Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown decided not to bring charges against police officers involved in two of three cases of mental crisis related deaths.
Back in June 2025, over a span of ten days, Bilal “BJ” Abdullah, Dontae Melton, Jr. and Pytorcarcha Brooks met with death while experiencing a mental crisis.
The AG’s investigation into Brooks’ death is ongoing.
In the months since the cases have largely receded from the headlines, the families of Bdullah and Melton have filed lawsuits, while the Baltimore City Council held not one but two hearings with another scheduled for April 2026 to address the police response to mental crisis.
Meanwhile as these developments unfold, questions should be raised about what has changed in the months since the first Council hearing held back in August 2025. During that marathon hearing, the public learned that less than 1% of the 911 calls were actually diverted to 988, the response times extending well beyond the national standard of one hour. We also learned how few folks are even remotely aware of the 988 number, or the outdated computer aided dispatch system CAD prone to frequent outages.
This is what the AG stated in their Melton report about the CAD system, “...Subsequent investigation revealed that although BPD dispatch told the officers that requests for EMS had been sent, due to an extended malfunction with the city’s Computer-Aided Dispatch (CAD) system, the Baltimore City Fire Department (BCFD) never received the requests…”
Meanwhile there’s recent reporting indicating that the CAD failed 12 times in two years. Baltimore's dispatch system failed 12 times in past two years.
The lack of accountability, mounting unanswered questions, political misleadership, budget priorities, along with the publicized failures of the computer aided dispatch system should trigger a different conversation about police response to mental illness in Baltimore City.
A conversation that prioritizes meeting the needs of the mentally challenged.
A look around the country shows examples of communities and neighborhoods addressing the police response to episodes of mental health crisis.
Taking a legal approach by filing lawsuits in federal court or utilizing the electoral political arena by forcing a ballot measure to be voted on. There’s also models of self determined actions serving as critical reminders that people have the right to take charge of their own affairs and resources, to participate in shaping policies and making decisions that directly affect their lives.
In Los Angeles, there’s the Unarmed Model of Crisis Response (UMCR), in
Eugene, Oregon, there’s CAHOOTS or the Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets. In Denver, there’s the Support Team Assisted Response (STAR). There's Black-led programs such as Anti Police-Terror Project (APTP)'s MH First program in Sacramento, and the Black Emotional and Mental Health Collective (BEAM).
There’s clear evidence that the answers lie in the capacity to have community based, community directed discussions to generate demands and solutions, where a course of action is defined.
It’s a conversation and discussion that will not only instill a renewed sense of urgency, but reflects a paradigm shift in the discourse on community control that extends beyond policing to redefine public safety.
There is an opportunity to shift the discussion towards meeting the mental and behavioral needs in Baltimore City.
Bilal “BJ” Abdullah Dontae Melton, Jr.
Press Release: Attorney General Brown Announces That No Charges Will Be Filed in the June 17, 2025 Fatal Police-Involved Shooting in Baltimore - News - Office of the Attorney General of Maryland
Independent Investigations Division Report: 25-IID-012 FINAL_Declination Report- 6.17.2025 Baltimore Police Involved Shooting (ABDULLAH).pdf
Family Attorney: http://instagram.com/reels/DSnNcoNEYxb/
Dontae Melton, Jr.
Press Release: Attorney General Brown Announces No Charges Will Be Filed in the June 24, 2025 Fatal Police-Involved In-Custody Death in the City of Baltimore - News - Office of the Attorney General of Maryland
Independent Investigations Division Report: 25-IID-013 FINAL_Declination Report Baltimore In-custody 6.24.25.pdf