With their son in the throes of a mental health crisis last November, Bill and Faith Piersing did what they’d been told to do countless times before: They dialed 911.
Canada will be the headquarters for a future NATO-linked financial institution, official says10 current and former Mexican officials accused in US indictment of aiding drug traffickingSupreme Court weakens the Voting Rights Act and aids GOP efforts to control the HouseCam York scores in OT as Flyers beat Penguins 1-0 in Game 6, reach Round 2Prosecutors say singer D4vd stabbed 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez to death to silence herAP Entertainment WireNipper, stay!
The future of a beloved dog statue on a New York warehouse is up in the air1 million bees make for bumper-to-buzzer traffic on a Tennessee highway rampWhy the workouts of Formula 1 drivers might help computer users with 'tech neck'Working unseen to frame risk and ritual in a conflict-zone funeralDemocrats investigate as Trump OKs almost $2 billion in taxpayer money to end offshore wind projectsCDC warns of drug-resistant salmonella infections linked to backyard poultryTakeaways from AP's report on the push for raw milk intensifyingOne Tech Tip: Don't use rice for your device. Here's how to dry out your smartphoneStir well, slap lightly.
Tips for making a mint julep worthy of the Kentucky Derby'If my people': Here's why the Bible passage Trump read aloud is so potent and polarizingIran’s supreme leader vows to protect nuclear and missile capabilitiesThe Afternoon WireFull federal appeals court won't rehear $83 million defamation verdict against TrumpMan charged with trying to kill Trump took hotel room selfie before rushing gala, investigators sayCanadian official backs up report that Iranian soccer chief was denied entry for FIFA eventDavid Allan Coe, who wrote 'Take This Job and Shove It' and other country hits, dies at 86Nipper, stay!
The future of a beloved dog statue on a New York warehouse is up in the air1 million bees make for bumper-to-buzzer traffic on a Tennessee highway rampWhy the workouts of Formula 1 drivers might help computer users with 'tech neck'Working unseen to frame risk and ritual in a conflict-zone funeralDemocrats investigate as Trump OKs almost $2 billion in taxpayer money to end offshore wind projectsCDC warns of drug-resistant salmonella infections linked to backyard poultryTakeaways from AP's report on the push for raw milk intensifyingOne Tech Tip: Don't use rice for your device. Here's how to dry out your smartphoneStir well, slap lightly.
Tips for making a mint julep worthy of the Kentucky Derby'If my people': Here's why the Bible passage Trump read aloud is so potent and polarizingWith their son in the throes of a mental health crisis last November, Bill and Faith Piersing did what they’d been told to do countless times before: They dialed 911. The couple were hoping for a helping hand to deescalate the situation and transport him to a hospital.
Instead, the law enforcement officers who showed up at their home seemed intent on arresting their son, sparking an altercation that would quickly escalate, Bill Piersing told Bridge Michigan. Bailey Piersing, the 23-year-old son with bipolar type schizoaffective disorder, did not respond well. His parents say he resisted arrest, bit an officer and was tased multiple times before he was taken to the hospital, and then jail.
On Monday, he was sentenced to 10 months in jail and 30 months of probation on a felony count of assaulting, resisting or obstructing a police officer causing injury, with credit for 148 days already served, Ottawa County court records show. The agreement was part of a plea deal, down from two felony counts.
After years of taking his son to appointments and working to connect him with appropriate treatment and resources, “all I know is the results of my efforts have been futile,” Bill Piersing said.
“A lot of people understand, but nobody can do anything. ” A spokesperson for the Ottawa County Sheriff’s Office was not available to discuss the arrest, and Bridge Michigan’s Freedom of Information Act request for the incident report remains pending.
“It is clear all aspects of this case, including the mental health of the defendant and the injuries to our law enforcement officers, were considered and presented to the court who made the ultimate determination of sentencing,” Ottawa County Prosecuting Attorney Sarah F. Matwiejczyk said in a statement. The Piersings’ experience is far from unique as families, friends, officials and law enforcement agencies across Michigan grapple with how to respond to mental health emergencies in which an already unpredictable situation can quickly turn volatile.
The debate was thrust into the spotlight earlier this year, when a 911 call reporting a man’s erratic behavior with a sword in Ypsilantiinvolving multiple law enforcement agencies, a SWAT team and a wide range of police tools like tear gas and flashbangs. The man, Ruben Peeler, was charged with multiple felonies for resisting arrest, sparking community backlash and calls for meaningful reform.
Advocates for change point to myriad solutions that could help improve outcomes, from increasing participation in crisis training for law enforcement to making unarmed mental health professionals primary responders in certain situations. In the state Capitol, lawmakers areThe goal should be early intervention, said former Wayne County probate judge and state court administrator Milton Mack. He likened the current process for getting mental health treatment to telling someone with cancer to “come back when you’re stage four.
” “We should treat people before they become homeless, before they get incarcerated, before they become permanently disabled,” said Mack, who helped draft many of the legislative recommendations.
“This is fixable. We can do a better job. ”Though there have been growing calls statewide for alternatives, experts say a 911 dispatch remains the go-to option in situations where a person experiencing a mental health crisis is in danger of hurting themselves or others.from Michigan’s State 911 Committee.
While state statistics don’t specifically track how many of those calls are related to mental health emergencies,To help streamline response, Detroit’s department has a mental health co-response unit that features trained officers and behavioral specialists. Some communities, including, an evidence-based model designed to build community partnerships between law enforcement, mental health and addiction professionals and people with lived experience of mental illness.
Statewide, about 15% of sheriffs and police chiefs say they’ve implemented some kind of alternative response program for mental health calls, according to theto work with agencies on creating or improving crisis intervention teams. The process entails 40-hour, in-person training sessions that familiarize first responders with mental health disorders, de-escalation tactics in crisis situations and people actively managing their own or their loved ones’ mental health conditions.
“You can’t afford not to invest in this,” said Kevin Fischer, executive director of both the state’s CIT office and the National Alliance on Mental Illness Michigan,showing that communities that have adopted the model have experienced an increased use of behavioral health care resources and overall cost savings, as well as reductions in use of force and injuries to officers and civilians. One big issue Michigan’s office is facing: because there are no formal regulations or requirements, it’s hard to tell which Michigan communities with crisis intervention teams are using best practices, Fischer said.
Another issue is long-term funding. The office, which operates on a $500,000 budget, won’t be funded past October if it’s not included in the next state budget currently being “A half million dollars is a drop in the bucket compared to the return on investment,” Fischer said.
“It’s anywhere from three to 10 times more expensive to incarcerate a person with a mental illness than it is to get them services through the community mental health system. ”Increased mental health training isn’t necessarily a guarantee for positive outcomes in emergency situations. And in Ypsilanti, the county’s crisis negotiation team was involved in the multi-day response to the mental health call for Peeler, who barricaded himself in his home with a sword as responders attempted to make contact.
Law enforcement eventually used tear gas, a fire hose and punched a hole through the front of the house to retrieve Peeler. The Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office at the time credited responders’ “unwavering dedication to service” as the reason why no one was seriously injured or killed, but neighbors and community members have insisted that law enforcement Matt Saxton, CEO and executive director of the Michigan Sheriffs’ Association, told Bridge Michigan that law enforcement has seen far more interactions with people with mental health concerns in recent decades since the closure of state-run psychiatric hospitals in the 1980s and 1990s.
It’s not unheard of, he said, for law enforcement to get called to emergency rooms to assist with people in mental health crises who are acting out. Many individuals “get lodged in a county jail when really they need medical mental health treatment” if their response to intervention turns volatile.
“Law enforcement, to a great extent, tries everything that they can do to use the least amount of force necessary and try to de-escalate the situations,” he said. “But in some cases, those individuals mentally aren’t in the spot where they can de-escalate with conversation…so it is difficult. ”, and has also launched a co-response program where clinicians respond with the sheriff’s office and Holland Police Department to behavioral health crisis calls.
Currently, that co-response team is only available during weekdays. But Tim Piers, director of crisis services at Ottawa County Community Mental Health, said the county is actively working to expand it 24/7 and hopes to be fully operational by the end of the year.
“As we’re building out the service, the community needs to be able to count on it every time, and it’s very important to us that they are able to do so,” Piers said. “It’s going to be just a really critical service for our community, because behavioral health crises continue to be something our community is identifying as an issue that we can address better.
” The team currently responds to between 1,200 to 1,500 behavioral health crisis calls a year, Piers said, but noted that’s during business hours. Going by national averages, he said the county could have as many as 10,000 to 20,000 calls per year that could be served by behavioral health professionals.
“We’re working really hard to give them the kind of services that we would all want for our family member or our neighbor or anyone facing that kind of situation,” Piers said. The Piersings believe more focused training for officers on how to respond to mental health emergencies might have helped in their situation in Grand Haven and potentially prevented the altercation that landed their son in jail.
Prior to the November 2025 call that led to his eventual arrest, their son had been taking medication and going to appointments at Ottawa County Community Mental Health, but struggled to connect with his caseworker, and the family had required emergency assistance on other occasions.
“If you call in a mental health emergency like we had done previously, it just depends on who you get,” Bill Piersing said. “The previous time, they took him to the hospital as requested. This time turned into an ordeal.
” The Piersings said they’d managed to calm their son down enough to agree to go to the hospital and told the two responding officers they no longer needed their assistance, but that the officers insisted on making contact and the situation escalated quickly from there.
“He was trying to fight back in any way he could, and a bite — that was it,” Faith Piersing said. “They had him down on the ground. ”A wide majority of local sheriffs and police chiefs are on board with improving mental health responses. But many don’t see a viable pathway to getting it started in their communities.
As of 2024, more than 80% of county sheriffs and local police chiefs supported some type of alternative approach for responding to 911 mental health calls, the 2024 University of Michigan Support was highest for co-response, which involves adding behavioral health specialists to a team of trained law enforcement. As a group, law enforcement leaders were more skeptical of allowing autonomous non-police mental health experts to handle mental health calls, an approach favored by some advocates.
Nearly 60% of police chiefs and more than half of sheriffs who responded believed lack of funding, staffing concerns and the added difficulties of keeping civilian responders safe would make it hard to adopt such an approach in their communities. Debra Horner, the survey’s senior program manager, said it’s easier for urban communities to envision novel approaches to mental health response in part because there are more specialists available.
In small towns where dollars and personnel are already stretched thin, it’s a tougher sell without additional support, she said.
“If you’re in a small, rural county…your sheriff’s department doesn’t have people who they can call upon to take out with them on some of these calls,” Horner said, later adding: “In the places in which it’s relatively easy to develop and initiate this, they’ve done it. ” Fischer, who runs the state’s crisis intervention team office, said rural communities are equally susceptible to mental illness, yet typically have the lowest access to behavioral health care resources.
Even in communities where those resources aren’t available, there are options responding agencies can take, he said. Both he and Saxton of the Michigan Sheriffs’ Association cited one option where officers carry iPads into the field to connect with mental health professionals on scene if they’re dealing with a crisis situation.
“Across the country, in many communities, law enforcement is the only response available to people who are experiencing a mental health crisis,” he said. “We have to start somewhere.
”Advocates for change say getting people treatment before it escalates to a crisis is just as important as preparing first responders to divert people with serious mental illnesses away from the courts or jail.designed to keep people with various conditions out of criminal courts, as well as a variety of jail diversion programs. There are limitations to who can participate, however, particularly when a person is charged with violent crimes.
Experts say outcomes can also vary widely based on where the incident takes place, the individual circumstances of the case and whether judges offer leniency in order to divert people with diagnosed mental health conditions to treatment instead of jail. Mack, the former probate court judge, said the biggest challenge and opportunity in Michigan is to better connect all of the groups dealing with mental health emergencies on a day-to-day basis — law enforcement, crisis centers, emergency rooms, hospitals, schools, courts, community mental health systems — and adopt a recovery-oriented model.would ease involuntary-admission procedures, extend court-ordered care, shift more authority to community mental health agencies and create a pathway to divert misdemeanor defendants into treatment.
“These bills…would make it easier for families to intervene early in the course of their loved one’s mental illness and get outpatient treatment,” Mack said. “And we know that works. ” The Piersings would welcome any mental health assistance they can get for their son once they sort out his current legal troubles.
After years of searching for solutions, they still don’t have answers, but they’ll continue to fight for a future for their son that doesn’t involve homelessness or jail. They plan to remain in Grand Haven while they sort out their son’s legal troubles. Currently, they’re working with court officials to see if he can serve out the remainder of his sentence in psychiatric treatment rather than jail.
Their top priority in a new home: robust, easily accessible mental health resources that prepare their son to live on his own when they’re no longer able to care for him. Much remains up in the air, but Bill Piersing knows one thing for sure. He’ll never call 911 on his son again.
“If this is their help, yeah, I don’t want it,” he said. “We were having a crisis and trying to get help, and that didn’t do anything but throw gas on the fire and get us in this predicament that we’re in right now. ”
Law Enforcement Bill Piersing General News Mental Health Michigan Kevin Hertel MI State Wire Sarah F. Matwiejczyk Matt Saxton Grand Haven Ruben Peeler Health Debra Horner U.S. News Tim Piers Kevin Fischer U.S. News
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Alaska Senate committee floats ‘mini-bus’ education bill aimed at one-time funding, policy changesThe bill would add nearly $82 million for school districts’ energy costs, transportation, reading instruction and career and technical education, and establish a student loan forgiveness program
Read more »
Lauren Boebert unveils bill to get Trump’s White House ballroom ‘over the finish line’The legislation, titled the TRUMP Ballroom Act, would give the president authorization to 'design and construct a ballroom facility.'
Read more »
Johnson breaks GOP impasse and tees up votes on spy tool, farm bill, and budget billHouse Speaker Mike Johnson’s (R-LA) push to move three major pieces of legislation this week is back on track after a GOP impasse.
Read more »
GOP rebels threaten to sink spy powers, farm bill, DHS funding billHouse Speaker Mike Johnson is facing a potential floor revolt that could derail major GOP priorities and bring the House to a standstill.
Read more »
Larkspur Fire considers potential tax question for November ballotTyler Melito joined the Denver7 newsroom in February 2026 as a multimedia journalist.
Read more »
MORNING GLORY: GOP's only path in November -- defend Trump and defeat radicals in IranFox News Channel offers its audiences in-depth news reporting, along with opinion and analysis encompassing the principles of free people, free markets and diversity of thought, as an alternative to the left-of-center offerings of the news marketplace.
Read more »
