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As More States Target Disavowed 鈥楨xcited Delirium鈥 Diagnosis, Police Groups Push Back

Following a pivotal year in the movement to discard the term 鈥渆xcited delirium,鈥 momentum is building in several states to ban the discredited medical diagnosis from death certificates, law enforcement training, police incident reports, and civil court testimony.

In January, California became the first state to prohibit the medical term from many official proceedings. Now, lawmakers in , , , and are considering bills that also would rein in how the excited delirium concept is used.

The new spate of state proposals, driven by families who lost relatives after encounters with law enforcement, marks an important step in doing away with a concept that critics say spurs police to overuse lethal force.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the law following the science, which is what we want to see,鈥 said , an attorney who worked on an influential of how the term excited delirium evolved into a concept whose legitimacy is largely rejected by the medical community.

But initial momentum in statehouses is being met with fresh resistance from law enforcement agencies and other defenders, including some who agree that excited delirium is a sham diagnosis.

The bills 鈥渃learly run afoul of the First Amendment鈥 and violate free speech, said Bill Johnson, executive director of the . He also argued that law enforcement officers do encounter symptoms and behaviors associated with excited delirium.

Excited delirium is a four-decade-old diagnostic theory that has been used to explain how a person experiencing severe agitation can suddenly die while being restrained. Last year, the American College of Emergency Physicians withdrew a 2009 report that had been the last remaining official medical pillar of support for the theory used increasingly over the prior 15 years to explain away police culpability for many in-custody deaths.

Excited delirium was cited as a legal defense in the 2020 deaths of George Floyd in Minneapolis; Daniel Prude in Rochester, New York; and Angelo Quinto in Antioch, California, among others. The theory proposed that individuals in a mental health crisis, often under the influence of drugs or alcohol, can exhibit superhuman strength as police try to control them, then die suddenly from the condition, not the police response.

The New York City Police Department issued training materials in 2021 and 2022 that tell officers to restrain and stun people they encounter who exhibit signs of excited delirium, such as 鈥渆levated body temperatures, increased physical strength and lack of physical fatigue,鈥 according to , a nonprofit newsroom. The NYPD did not respond to requests for comment on its training or the new state bill.

"They still have this on the books," said Democratic New York state Assembly member , who introduced the bill that calls for banning the term from death certificates, autopsies, law enforcement training, incident reports, and court proceedings. "And it鈥檚 pretty concerning the types of restraints they are recommending, given lack of evidence that this is an actual medical syndrome."

The Minneapolis Police Department, which according to the used the term in trainings, declined to comment on its training materials and the pending state legislation. That bill would prohibit excited delirium and similar terms from being cited as a cause of death, used as a medical diagnosis, or included in law enforcement training.

A family portrait taken on the steps of a beige building decorated with a large clay sun. Sheldon Haleck stands in front, on the lowest step, with his brother, Anthony behind him; next is his mother, Verdell; and father, William, on the tallest step.
Sheldon Haleck (front) with his brother, Anthony; mother, Verdell; and father, William. The former Hawaii Air National Guardsman was 38 when he died after an encounter with police in 2015. His parents filed a civil lawsuit against the officers after his death, which the Halecks ultimately lost in large part due to an argument that he had died of 鈥渆xcited delirium.鈥 (Aaron Reis)

But the theory鈥檚 presence in training materials may also be starting to change. In Colorado 鈥 where the term was used, in part, to justify the 2019 killing of in Aurora 鈥 a state board eliminated the term from law enforcement training starting this January. Law enforcement officers restrained the 23-year-old, and paramedics injected him with a lethal dose of ketamine.

This year, Colorado lawmakers are debating a measure that largely mirrors California鈥檚 bill but allows the term to remain in civil court proceedings.

At the bill鈥檚 hearing before the on Feb. 6, Rebecca De Luna described her family鈥檚 anguish over the of her daughter鈥檚 father, Alejandro Gutierrez, in Thornton police custody. She said excited delirium was classified as the cause of his death.

鈥淗is face was bruised with an imprint of a shoe. His appearance was unrecognizable,鈥 De Luna testified. 鈥淭he term has been used far too long as an excuse for law enforcement to protect themselves when someone dies in their custody, quite frankly, as a result of excessive force and what I consider police brutality resulting in death.鈥

Several medical service providers and educators testified in opposition. , the University of Denver鈥檚 emergency medical services program manager, told the committee that he did not object to banning 鈥渆xcited delirium鈥 in death certificates and police training, as police are not health professionals. But banning the term鈥檚 use from medical personnel training would amount to legislating medicine and impeding academic freedom, he said.

鈥淚f we cannot study and learn from the past, even when that past is hurtful, we are now condemning ourselves to repeat it,鈥 Seward told lawmakers.

, a California civil rights attorney who testified in support of the Colorado bill, was surprised by opponents鈥 arguments that such bills could limit free speech and discussion about the history of the idea.

鈥淭hat to me felt a little ridiculous,鈥 said Sherwin, who co-authored the Physicians for Human Rights report. Such bills keep a discredited theory from being falsely used to respond to a crisis and keep 鈥渏unk science鈥 out of official records, she said.

The Colorado bill passed the state鈥檚 House in a 42-19 vote in mid-February and is now before the state Senate. It was amended to clarify that 鈥渆xcited delirium鈥 may be used when teaching about the history of the term and that EMS courses are allowed on 鈥渟afe and effective medical interaction with individuals exhibiting an altered mental state鈥 who have symptoms that include agitation, aggression, or violence.

Some of the push for such legislation comes from families whose loved ones鈥 deaths were blamed on excited delirium, rather than on use of force during a police encounter. The Hawaii bill was introduced after William and Verdell Haleck learned about California鈥檚 effort and began contacting lawmakers in Hawaii. Their son Sheldon died there in 2015 after he was pepper-sprayed, shocked, and restrained by Honolulu police. In a civil trial that the Halecks lost, officers blamed his death on excited delirium.

The Hawaii bill would ban excited delirium from being used in death certificates, police incident reports, and civil cases. It had not been scheduled for a legislative committee hearing as of mid-March, but the Halecks are hopeful it will eventually pass.

鈥淚t would give us some sort of closure and justice,鈥 said William Haleck.

The Honolulu Police Department is monitoring the bill and hasn鈥檛 taken a position on it, said Michelle Yu, a spokesperson for the department. And the bill would have little impact on Honolulu鈥檚 Department of the Medical Examiner, said its director, Masahiko Kobayashi, because doctors there don鈥檛 use excited delirium as a cause of death.

One reason such bills are still important is because they prevent policies from fluctuating with each new leadership change, said , legal director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, which helped draft model legislation banning excited delirium and is pushing for the New York bill.

鈥淓ven if you are doing everything right, you don鈥檛 know if your successor will be,鈥 Siffert said. 鈥淗istorically we have seen those ups and downs in our agencies.鈥

Supporters of such state legislation say that banning the term excited delirium is just a first step toward reducing deaths in police custody.

鈥淭he underlying context doesn鈥檛 change with legislation alone,鈥 Naples-Mitchell said. 鈥淚t is going to take a very long time to address the root causes.鈥

Mountain States editor Matt Volz contributed to this article.

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