Last month, Sean Bickings, 34, pleaded for Arizona officers to help him when he was drowning in a lake. The officers said they werenβt jumping in after him, according to NBC News. Bickingsβ body wasnβt recovered until six hours later. Tempe City has released body camera footage of the incident and the responding officers have been placed on administrative leave.
Suggested Reading
The footage was about 12 minutes long and showed the moments leading up to Bickingsβ death. Per the cityβs statement, the police responded to a disturbance between Bickings and a woman near the cityβs Center for the Arts. When the officers ran the pairβs names in their database, Bickings climbed over a nearby fence and began swimming across the lake. Officers informed him swimming was not allowed in the lake.
Tempe City officials said he went about 30 to 40 yards before he signaled that he needed help.
More on the body cam footage from NBC News:
Bickings responds: βIβm going to drown. Iβm going to drown.β
The same officer then says, βNo, youβre not.β
According to the transcript, another officer tells Bickings to βgo to the pylon and hold onβ before he tells Bickings he is not jumping in after him.
Bickings then says: βPlease help me. Please, please, please.β He also says: βI canβt touch. Oh, God. Please help me. Help me.β
Bickingsβ female companion is quoted telling officers Bickings is drowning. She also says: βHeβs everything I got. I canβt lose him. Heβs going to die.β
An officer then says, βThe other officer is going to get the boat,β according to the transcript.
According to NBC affiliate KPNX, Bickingsβ body was pulled from the lake six hours later. The cityβs police union issued a statement after the footage was released explaining that officers were not trained for water rescues and didnβt have the equipment to help a drowning person.
However, per the cityβs statement, the three officers involved will be investigated for their response to the situation by the Arizona Department of Public Safety and Scottsdale Police Department. Also, they have been placed on non-disciplinary paid leave.
City Manager Andrew Ching and Police Chief Jeff Glover called the drowning a βtragedy.β
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.