The DPD actively stopped trained crisis responder neighbor from assisting with de-escalation. I used to have a neighbor two blocks away from me, they are no longer my neighbor, which is unfortunate. I am Indigenous, they are Indigenous. I was walking one hot summer day, and heard shouting and saw many police cars a couple blocks away from where I live. This was about a month or two after George Floyd's murder, so I ran over, as a concerned neighbor. There were 11 officers surrounding the outside of this man's house. He was yelling at them and seemed to be experiencing a mental health crisis. I was asked to identify myself, having been on a walk, didn't have my phone or ID, so I identified myself verbally. I even stated how I am a trained crisis response provider, trained by a local tribal agency (whom I identified to them). I said I was his neighbor and I was concerned that the police were escalating the situation by having all these men with guns staring back at and posturing threateningly to a man who is distraught. The officer interacting with me said that since he didn't know me and I couldn't identify myself, I did, he has a computer in one of the multitude of police cars on scene. And he said that the DPD's social workers would take over soon. Boy did they handle it poorly. I was told to stay away from the scene, I was not allowed to sit in any shade, as it was too close for their liking which seemed like a punishment to me for butting in. It's like mid 80's and glaring sun. Getting back to the social workers who showed up, they obviously had little to no training about Indigenous peoples. When they got to the stoop where he was, they did check to see if they could talk with him, but they grab his medicine pouch around his neck to say that it looks pretty? Strike one. They pick up his spirit plate full of food and ask him to eat some? Atrocious. He told them what it was and they still didn't put it down right away, still asked him to eat some. Turns out this man was grieving as he had just lost his parental rights for his children... I am now a mental health professional and was a mental health practitioner at the time. I offered to be of assistance, identified myself and my relevant experience/training/life as an Indigenous person/neighbor. And they had me sit on the sidelines to watch this all unfold. After the last insult by pushing spirit plate food at this man's face, he backs up into his door and the 11 officers swarm onto him. He pushed himself away and got into the house, shutting the door and locking it on them. He yelled at them from the window a bit, I guess since they didn't have a warrant they didn't break the door down. A similar situation unfolded again a couple of weeks later, and after that, he was no longer in that house. I should have recorded things, it was difficult to think because I thought I was going to see a neighbor get shot by the police. They only escalated things and made everything worse.