Editor's note: This story includes detailed descriptions of violence.
Irvo Otieno was killed in custody earlier this month at a psychiatric hospital while experiencing mental health distress. Reverend Al Sharpton says this has to be a turning point.
Who is he? Sharpton is a civil rights activist known for many things: as a Baptist minister, an advocate for social justice and equity, and the founder of the National Action Network.
What's the big deal? Earlier this month, Otieno, a 28-year-old Black man in Virginia, was killed in custody at a psychiatric hospital.
What's he saying? Sharpton spoke with NPR's Juana Summers on Thursday about his experience at Otieno's funeral, and what he expects moving forward.
On changes he and Otieno's family hope for:
The mother, Caroline, said she would like to see a law that would deal with how you handle the question of mental illness, where law enforcement doesn't necessarily kick in, but it [instead] kicks in with people that are trained in the mental health field, with their supervision, and where there is a real kind of instruction on how you deal with causal mental health, [with] people, patients, and from families.
On why he called specifically on VA Gov. Glenn Youngkin:
Governor Youngkin is being touted by some to be a presidential candidate. And health services in Virginia are under his governorship, under his direction.
As he tries to build a national reputation, he needs to deal with a real tragedy right there in Virginia.
How he operates on this tragedy will tell those of us around the country a lot about him. You're talking about an unarmed, non-threatening, young Black man who was handcuffed and shackled, while these people piled on him, to where they literally choked the life out of him. The governor ought to respond with more than sympathy. He ought to respond with some action, [some] legislation where this can't happen again.
On how he talks to the grieving families that face these tragedies:
I tell them the truth, that we can't bring your child back. But we can certainly raise your child's situation and your situation, to where there's meaning.
That is hard to see through the immediate pain, and hard to feel there's meaning, and [that] your child could be a symbol that we cannot continue to let this happen.
And we get other family members that will come in. I've thrown Eric Garner's mother, and Trayvon Martin's mother, and Ahmaud Arbery's mother and others around, because only they understand that pain.
And I tell them, "I can't promise you when it's going to happen on a federal level. But I can promise you that we'll be there until it happens. And we will be there with you for whatever you need. In terms of counseling and others, we'll get professionals for you. Because we're committed to this." And in that candor, and honesty, I think that's why they stay with us. And we stay with them because they know that we told them in the first place what was going to happen.
Want to learn more? Listen to the Consider This episode on how specialized police units are in the spotlight again.
So, what now?
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