DOJ Says That Cops Who Killed Autistic Teenager May Have Violated His Civil Rights
Eric Parsa died after police placed him in a "prone position" for over nine minutes. Now, the DOJ says that the officers' actions likely violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.

An autistic teenager died in 2020 after Louisiana police officers sat on him and placed him in a chokehold for several minutes. According to a statement of interest from the Department of Justice, the officers' actions could have violated the boy's civil rights.
In January 2020, Eric Parsa, a "severely autistic" teenager, began having an "acute sensory episode" in the parking lot of a New Orleans–area laser tag center. According to a lawsuit filed by Parsa's parents in 2021, Parsa "began to experience a sudden sensory outburst or 'melt-down'" and began hitting himself and his father. At Parsa's parents' request, an employee at the laser tag center called the police for help.
When Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office (JPSO) police arrived, Parsa slapped one officer, who responded by forcibly taking Parsa to the ground, where he was held in a prone position for over nine minutes. During this time, officers placed Parsa "on his stomach, handcuffed, shackled, arms and legs held down, head, shoulder and neck encircled by the arm of a deputy, with JPSO deputies applying their own body weight as a restraint." Officers only stopped and placed Parsa in a "recovery position" when they noticed that he had "gone limp and he had urinated." An unconscious Parsa was then taken to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
Parsa's family filed a lawsuit against the officers in January 2021, alleging that the officers' conduct violated Parsa's civil rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Last year, the couple made further allegations of wrongdoing after JPSO officers attempted to, without probable cause, obtain warrants for Parsa's school records detailing past misbehavior, seemingly to justify the officers' fatal use of force against Parsa.
Earlier this month, the Department of Justice released a statement of interest—which DOJ officials often use to persuade judges to take a preferred interpretation of a given legal issue—that tentatively agreed with Parsa's parents, stating that the officers' conduct may have violated Parsa's rights under the ADA.
"Here, the record is replete with facts showing that several Defendants knew about E.P.'s disability before or on arrival to the scene and that others learned of his disability during the encounter," reads the 21-page statement. "E.P.'s behavior, such as slapping his head, and failure to say anything other than 'firetruck,' could be construed as 'clear signals' of E.P.'s disability-related limitations and need for reasonable modifications," as required by the ADA.
Instead of pinning him to the ground, the statement notes that officers should have accommodated Parsa's disability by "using de-escalation strategies; removing distractions and providing time and space to calm the situation when the child poses no significant safety threat; and avoiding or minimizing touching a child whose disability makes them sensitive to touch."
But while this intervention from the DOJ is good news for Parsa's parents—particularly because of a recent motion from the JPSO attempting to toss the Parsas' ADA claims—as long as police officers retain qualified immunity protections, actually holding government actors accountable is still an uphill battle.
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Hope Pops learned his lesson about calling the cops when a family member is having a mental problem.
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This young man, by the description in article, committed aggravated contempt of cop, and in addition, his actions likely constituted battery of protected state actor. This punishment for this is death, frequently without a whole lot of delay or legal folderol.
At Parsa's parents' request, an employee at the laser tag center called the police for help.
Root cause of the kid's death. Never, I mean NEVER, call the cops when a loved one is having a mental episode.
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Sometimes you need some help with an adult having a mental problem. There should be non-cop experts to call on.
If you call the cops, you expect some show of force and/or restraint.
Ask yourself the question: What can the cops do to resolve the situation better than you?
My thoughts too. Also, didn't his parents already try those techniques? One has to assume they know what works and doesn't work for their own kid, and they tried that before they called for the cops. The only reason to call the cops was because he was beyond their control. Also, what proceeded when the cops showed up, and then him assaulting the cops? Did they try to de-escalate and it failed? Or did he assault them as soon as they arrived? From the story, it seems there was some lag time, as Camp refers to the cops observing him hitting himself and screaming firetruck, and that other cops arrived and had time to be briefed on the situation. What were the cops doing during this time? How long was this period? After he assaulted the cop (and his parents) what response should the cops have done? Continue to allow him space? How much space and at what point should they conclude it isn't safe? Blaming the cops automatically is lazy, and biased. Maybe they were in the wrong, but there seems to be a lot of questions that Camp didn't address in her painting of the cops as wrong. Additionally, given how political the DoJ has become, are we really taking their assessment without question? Also, are disabilities act now interpreted as requiring the cops to accept being assaulted? This seems like a tragedy that the parents are now trying to find someone to blame for. Everyone blaming the cops, have you ever tried to subdue a person who is having a psychotic and violent break? I have, it's not that fucking easy.
…have you ever tried to subdue a person who is having a psychotic and violent break? I have, it’s not that fucking easy.
What prevents a parent/caregiver from using a taser (one example) during a psychotic event? I mean if all other de-escalation techniques have failed?
They would be certain to lose custody if they did that.
In this particular case, the kid would still be alive.
Everyone blaming the cops, have you ever tried to subdue a person who is having a psychotic and violent break? I have, it’s not that fucking easy.
I’ve never had to perform such on anyone suffering a psychotic episode that I’m aware of, but I would be interested to learn what exactly distinguishes subduing someone as a de-escalation technique from subduing them as a not-de-escalation technique.
I’m sure Ms. Camp’s well-seasoned experience reduces the vague criteria to something more clear than “When you restrain their movement to the point where they’ve stopped resisting without giving themselves a heart attack, you’ve subdued them.”
According to Steven A. George, an autism expert:
A psychotic episode is a break from reality. It involves visual or audio hallucinations, distorted thinking, delusions and/or paranoia. A person experiencing a psychotic episode cannot distinguish what it real from what is not real. It cannot be stopped immediately. With medication, symptoms are improved, but it will still just run its course.
A meltdown is nothing like that.
A meltdown is a reaction to a high degree of stress, usually, but not always, triggered by too much sensory input. It may involve crying, kicking, and/or self-harm, to cope with the stress. In adults, sometimes a meltdown is in the form of a panic attack, or often may be difficult to distinguish from a panic attack. The autistic individual experiencing a meltdown usually needs to merely get to a place or situation in which they feel safe or removed from the source of stress and it will then end.
In a meltdown, there is no hallucination or delusion. The autistic person may feel as if what is going on around them is more intense or threatening than it is, but that’s a case of personal perception, not delusion.
During this time, officers placed Parsa "on his stomach, handcuffed, shackled, arms and legs held down, head, shoulder and neck encircled by the arm of a deputy, with JPSO deputies applying their own body weight as a restraint."
How many pounds is that on the person's back?
Imagined byplay from one cop to another during this incident: "Damn, sarge, why won't this autistic fuck stop resisting!!"
How the fuck are cops supposed to know how to deal with your tard kids' "special needs".
If I slap a cop and don't settle the fuck down when they try to pin me and cuff me, they'll probably sit on me until I stop moving, too. Why didn't the kid's parents use "de-escalating strategies" to calm the kid down if they're so effective?
I used to work with this guy who said retards should be aborted or smothered at birth. Ray, is that you?
I used to work with this guy who said retards should be aborted or smothered at birth.
Bet he said that to you alot, huh?
Probably something the guy grumbled about every time he had to deal with Sarc’s pussy ass.
Um, because they're trained professionals?
So cops are the bad guys, again?
So, the kid was so out of control that his parents, who I assume have dealt with his autistic breaks before, couldn't handle him and called the cops. And the DoJ's conclusion is the cops should have used de-escalation techniques, which I assume his parents already tried. When the cops approached him were they trying to de-escalate before he assaulted them? You didn't address this part. The kid assaulted a cop, was uncontrollable by his primary caregivers, who he also assaulted. He continued to resist after he was handcuffed, for assaulting multiple people by that point. I'm not sure I agree with Camp on this one. The cops were placed in a no win situation. An out of control individual that had assaulted his primary care givers, then assaulted a cop. He was obviously a danger both to himself and to others. Giving him space etc, sounds like a good plan right up until it doesn't work (and didn't his parents already try that and it failed, thus they asked for the cops to be called?). Sometimes a tragedy is just a tragedy and no one is to blame. It kind of reads like this very well may have been one of those cases. Also, when someone is having a break, you'd be amazed how strong they can become and how hard it is to control them. Remember his parents could not control him, and he assaulted them, so they called the cops, which he then assaulted to. He assaulted multiple people. It's tragic he died, but let's look at it logically. His primary caregivers could not control him and requested the cops be called. He then assaulted the cops (after he had assaulted his parents). As someone on the spectrum, with a son on the spectrum, if he is having a break (luckily he is never violent) I already am trying all the things the DoJ said the cops should have done. If he is so out of control (which he has never been, being high functioning he doesn't have these kinds of breaks thank God) that I have to call the cops, the only reason is because all those techniques already failed. Why would I suspect they would work any better for the cops? And is that really what needs to be done if he is violent?
Sometimes a tragedy is just a tragedy and no one is to blame.
^This. The "best" solution seems to have been that the person not go to a laser tag center. Even if the parents expected a "melt down" and (e.g.) had sedatives or a straight jacket or whatever on them and ready to go, a similar death would've been a possibility. Even if the cops only deployed tasers. Even if nobody did anything and the person just had a destructive meltdown in the parking lot it's not clear that the ADA doesn't protect them from being forbade from coming back. None appear to be clearly optimal by libertarian or other standards.
"sit on someone for nine fucking minutes" can't be in a manual.
See above. Exactly what amount of time *should* the manual say? Or is time the wrong metric and it should say "Until they stop resisting."?
I've subdued plenty of people for sport (or other recreational activity). Some pretty hopping mad about losing, others insane about letting themselves quit going in. I know a few people who've had to choke out drunks or other miscreants. Again, AFAIK, none were having psychotic episodes. AFAICT, Daniel Penny only did it once. 10M arrests per year; even if they're 90% voluntary/peaceful, that's still one-in-a-million.
if people keep dying when cops are sitting on them we need lighter cops or no sitting.
it would have been "a tragedy is a tragedy" if the kid got shot. he got sat on until he died. not tragedy ... well, maybe in a Greek sense
it would have been “a tragedy is a tragedy” if the kid got shot. he got sat on until he died.
Fucking LOL! So, in your manual, under "de-escalation techniques" is says, "Drawing a gun and firing on a suspect suffering a psychotic episode may be permissible but sitting on them for __ min. is not."?
Seems almost exactly backwards.
dude none of it is permissible but if in any 1 of the 540 seconds he was being sat on, one of the officers involved had human-ed instead of animal-ed maybe nobody would be dead.
nobody needed to die. not "just a tragedy"
nobody needed to die.
(Not my personal opinion but, supposedly) Nobody needed to die in the Jordan Neely/Daniel Penny case either.
not “just a tragedy”
Fine, morbidly obese with an enlarged heart: died with police restraint, not of police restraint.
Yes, it's sad, but there really were no other options than to kill the mutherfucker. Nothing else to be done.
Not sure if sarcasm, but are you suggesting they should have let him go when he was still violently fighting them, instead of letting him go when he stopped violently fighting them. If so, why bother restraining him at all?
1) NEVER call the cops on a loved one having a mental health episode.
2) NEVER take a severely autistic person to a laser tag center.
All I can say is, "Well, DUH!"
Yeah number two jumped out at me. Someone who is severely autistic with sensory problems is not going to react well to that kind of environment. As to point number one, what the fuck did the parents expect the cops to do once their son became uncontrollable and violent? I have to assume they called the cops with the express purpose of the cops restraining their out of control and violent son. Then it turned tragic, and they want to blame someone. I highly doubt the cops were continuing to apply physical restraints because the kid became compliant after being taken down. That's a good way to get hurt (probably one of the number one causes of injuries in the line of duty for cops is restraining someone who is violent). Oh, and just because someone is cuffed doesn't make them more controllable if they are already out of control. I'm wondering if or how Reason would have covered this, if after assaulting his parents And a cop, the cops stepped back and the kid assaulted and harmed someone severely. I'm pretty sure Emma would have blamed them for that to. Police are not the best resource for psychiatric episodes however, once the person becomes violent, even the trained social workers or ambulances are going to call the police. Remember the parents couldn't control him. He was already becoming violent. I'm not sure what they expected the cops to do with someone who is out of control and violent.
There is something not being addressed here. Both parents stood there and watched the police kill their son? I can promise you that there is no way anyone puts my kid in a chokehold in front of me unless I am in chokehold as well. Having called the cops and then doing little to nothing to stop the cops, where do they get off criticizing the cops techniques for restraint after the fact?
^
The most likely scenario? It wasn't a chokehold. They were trying to control his head, to avoid him smashing his face repeatedly into the ground.
NEVER take a severely autistic person to a laser tag center.
Yeah, that seems kind of fucked up to me too. Why would you take your autistic kid to a place that they should have known would have a likelihood of causing him to have an episode. Maybe he had been doing better in the days/ weeks before and they thought maybe they'd try and see if he could handle it without going all batty? Still seems like an awfully big risk for little to no gain.
That's where they fucked up. Never call the cops for "help" with a difficult family member unless you're OK with the possibility of that family member being killed.
Slight disagreement. Never forcibly subdue a family member unless you're OK with the possibility.
Nobody gets on a subway train assuming they'll wind up like Daniel Penny.
>>likely violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.
absolutely the most important part of this story.
I'm curious how the fuck that matters. I don't care if someone is crippled, retarded, or psycho if they are causing harm. If the cops slapped him until he lost his shit because they knew he was psychologically prone to losing his shit from that, then there is a case to be made. They brought in the cops to make him sut the fuck down and didn't ask for the tap-out when it went too far.
Sounds like the parents want a payday using a weird loophole instead of seeking a criminal charge for what seems like an accident they forced on the police.
Well that's one way to get rid of a problem child and score a few taxpayer bucks on the settlement.
It's the new lottery in America.
The Jefferson Parish coroner ruled his death an accident due to "excited delirium due to an Acute Psychotic Episode in the setting of Severe Autistic Spectrum Disorder and Disruptive Behavior Disorder." The coroner also cited morbid obesity with prone positioning and cardiomegaly as identifying factors in Eric's death.
Took an obese person with a heart condition, prone to a variety of panic attacks, to laser tag arcade and called the police on him? "I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul."
I had that thought too. I doubt it’s actually the case. Most people are more stupid than they are scheming.
The only answer is to require all police officers to have degrees in criminal justice, sociology, American studies, English, history, and even philosophy can be beneficial.
Just for the record: Cops carry guns, cops carry mace, cops are trained in unarmed combat (I mean restraint techniques); why would any reasonable person call someone like that if they don't need violence deployed?
This is on the parents; the kid was in the wrong place, with the wrong environment, with caregivers incapable of controlling him. So yeah, blame the cops who showed up and did what cops do to prevent others from getting "slapped". It's called protecting the public.
Oh, and by the way, the DOJ lies a lot, so - - - - - - - - - -
It's called protecting the public from himself. Sure, sure.
[tasteless joke deleted]
People keep forgetting that this is Reason. The cops are automatically wrong. Even if they didn't show up or showed up and did nothing, they are wrong.
Even if they showed up, arrested the kook without incident, took him to a mental hospital, assisted the hospital staff with his transition and, in the process of assisting the staff, the kook got positionally asphyxiated.
I agree that the police need to be held more accountable. Even to standards above and beyond those of the average citizen. But, in the fashion of obfuscating police reform with race relations, there are people insanely focused on unequivocal protection to the detriment of any reform. Almost as a similar structured opposition.