But after three unsuccessful hours, reinforcements arrived in the form of the man’s orange-and-white feline.
Using his pet, hostage negotiators were able to persuade him to go back
inside the building, come down the stairs and surrender without
incident.
Within 45 minutes of the cat’s arrival, the 3½-hour standoff was over.
“Using the cat was ingenious,” said Officer Albie Esparza, a police
spokesman. “Never underestimate the power of the love between people and
their pets. I think it was great to think outside the box like the
officers did. It made enough of an impact on this person to bring him
down and come to his senses.”
The man had run into the building about 2:30pm, after he had been
stopped while driving a white Toyota Highlander that had no license
plates.
While California Highway Patrol officers questioned him, he sat on a sidewalk. When a computer check showed that the car was stolen, the man jumped to his feet and ducked into the building, CHP officials said. San Francisco police responded to the scene once the situation devolved from a traffic stop to a possible suicide attempt. Officers from the hostage negotiation team, the tactical unit, the motorcycle unit, the traffic division as well as Southern Station arrived to aid in the standoff, Esparza said. A common strategy in these situations is to call the family of the person in crisis, in hopes a loved one can talk them down, Esparza said. The man’s family was on its way from the East Bay as negotiators gently spoke to him from the fire escape.
When police learned the man’s relatives brought his cat to the scene, officers took it up to the negotiators. Shortly after 6pm, the man went back inside the building and the standoff was resolved. “I don’t remember ever using a cat before, but it worked,” Esparza said. “The guy voluntarily came out of the window and opened the door and was taken into custody without incident.” Esparza said he never got the cat’s name, but he applauded the officers for their quick thinking, as well as their sensitivity. Even as the man, later named as Dion Stamper, 47, of San Francisco, was handcuffed and taken to a police car, officers brought the cat to him so he could see his beloved feline before going to jail. “The hostage negotiators establish a trust with the person, regardless if they are suicidal or a suspect, and you want to maintain that trust as much as you can,” Esparza said. “The guy wasn’t resisting. There was no need not to help him out. Obviously, he had a very emotional attachment to the cat and it was nice to comfort him as much as possible.”
While California Highway Patrol officers questioned him, he sat on a sidewalk. When a computer check showed that the car was stolen, the man jumped to his feet and ducked into the building, CHP officials said. San Francisco police responded to the scene once the situation devolved from a traffic stop to a possible suicide attempt. Officers from the hostage negotiation team, the tactical unit, the motorcycle unit, the traffic division as well as Southern Station arrived to aid in the standoff, Esparza said. A common strategy in these situations is to call the family of the person in crisis, in hopes a loved one can talk them down, Esparza said. The man’s family was on its way from the East Bay as negotiators gently spoke to him from the fire escape.
When police learned the man’s relatives brought his cat to the scene, officers took it up to the negotiators. Shortly after 6pm, the man went back inside the building and the standoff was resolved. “I don’t remember ever using a cat before, but it worked,” Esparza said. “The guy voluntarily came out of the window and opened the door and was taken into custody without incident.” Esparza said he never got the cat’s name, but he applauded the officers for their quick thinking, as well as their sensitivity. Even as the man, later named as Dion Stamper, 47, of San Francisco, was handcuffed and taken to a police car, officers brought the cat to him so he could see his beloved feline before going to jail. “The hostage negotiators establish a trust with the person, regardless if they are suicidal or a suspect, and you want to maintain that trust as much as you can,” Esparza said. “The guy wasn’t resisting. There was no need not to help him out. Obviously, he had a very emotional attachment to the cat and it was nice to comfort him as much as possible.”
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