FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Dennis
Debbaudt's Autism Risk & Safety
Newsletter
2nd
Summer 2004 Edition!
July 2004
Here's what's up:
Journal of Emergency Medical
Services Reports on Autism - The
Journal of Emergency Medical Services
(JEMS) June 2004 issue features a
report by Loralee Olejnik
"Understanding Autism: How to
appropriately & safely approach,
assess & manage autistic patients"
My friend and colleague, San Diego
Fire Department Captain Ralph
Carrasquillo, is an autism dad who
oversees the administration staff for
the EMS Division. Ralph's been
actively training first response and
law enforcement professionals in the
San Diego area for several years. His
work is featured prominently in this
report.
Loralee Olejnik is a communications
instructor at San Diego State
University and a journalist working
with San Diego Medical Services
Enterprise, the City of San Diego's
9-1-1 paramedic program.
I was honored to be interviewed for
and contribute material to this
report.
JEMS June, 2004.
Feature
Understanding autism
How to appropriately & safely
approach, assess & manage autistic
patients by
Loralee Olejnik
[MEDLINE LOOKUP]

Autism Spectrum
Quarterly Premier Issue.
August 2004!!!! Autism Spectrum
Quarterly
(Formerly the Jenison Autism Journal /
The Morning News, edited by Carol
Gray) Diane Twachtman-Cullen, Ph.D.,
Editor-in-Chief; Liane Holliday
Willey, Ed.D., Senior Editor
Autism Spectrum Quarterly brings you
the quality that you expect from a
professional journal, with the
readability and practicality of a
high-quality magazine - and much more.
-
Internationally renowned
advisory board
-
Articles by,
for, and about individuals
with ASD
-
Cutting edge
information from the world
of scientific research
-
A focus on
families and family issues
-
Tips and
practical strategies for
dealing with a variety of
situations
-
Reviews of
books and resource materials
-
A spotlight
on best practices: Each
issue will feature an
educator,
clinician, or
paraprofessional whose work
on behalf of those with ASD
has
been exemplary.
-
ASQ features
a 21-member international
advisory board including
many of the
most well-respected
individuals in the ASD
community such as: Tony
Attwood,
Simon Baron-Cohen, Catherine
Lord, Nancy Minshew, and
Lorna Wing.
-
The premier
issue of Autism Spectrum
Quarterly, due out in
August, features
outstanding contributions
from the following
individuals:
-
Alyson
Beytien - You too?! Common
Stories from an Uncommon
Parent
-
Walter Coles
& Dennis Debbaudt - The Role
of the Family-School Liaison
Counselor
-
Cathy Pratt,
Ph.D. - School Cultures that
Support Students Across the
Autism Spectrum
-
Judith
Reichenberg-Ullman, ND,
LCSW& Robert Ullman, ND - A
Drug Free Approach to ASD:
Exceptional Medicine for
Exceptional Kids
-
Robert
Rosenbloom, M.D. - Baseball,
Hot Dogs, and Love
-
Liane
Holliday Willey, Ed.D. -
Protecting Aspies from
Danger
The fall issue will be
published in October. It will feature
articles covering issues related to
both children and adults with ASD.
Fall authors include: Dr. Julie
Donnelly, Linda Hodgdon, Dr. David
Holmes, Susan Moreno, and Stephen
Shore.
For more information and to register
online log onto
www.ASQuarterly.com
http://www.asquarterly.com/ .
Email your questions to
ASQmagazine@aol.com

Collaborations
Working together is underrated. I've
presented with Walter Coles in the
past and am grateful to Diane
Twachtman-Cullen and Liane Holliday
Willey for giving us the chance to
collaborate on the ASQ article. Walter
and I'll co-present again in New
Brunswick this coming November.
I've also had the fantastic experience
of presenting with Stephen Shore in
Massachusetts and having him sit in
with me at the ASA conference last
week. And the experience of
co-presenting with U.S. Deputy Marshal
Nick Proffitt was a thrill. Nick and I
have worked on this issue for almost
ten years
together, co-developed materials and
stayed in regular contact but had
never met in person until this past
spring in Virginia. We're working on
several new educational tools and I'll
report on this in a future newsletter.
Now I'll have the chance to work with
Lianne Holliday Willey in September in
Grand Rapids. We've worked together on
books, now we'll get to work together
live. I'm really looking forward to
this!
It's through these collaborations that
we get instant feedback, criticism and
different points of view. It sharpens
the mind and without question vastly
improves the work.
Thank you, my friends! Let's do this
more often!

Pensacola
Police Department's Take Me Home
Database Debuts
The seeds were sown for this
innovative special needs assistance
program when Pensacola, Florida PD
Officer Jimmy Donohoe attended a
meeting last summer of the Panhandle
Chapter of the Autism Society of
America. Officer Donohoe heard
first-hand the concerns that many
parents there had about their
wandering children who have autism.
Officer Donohoe, also the parent of a
special needs son, decided then and
there to do something to assist. He
approached Pensacola PD Chief John
Mathis who gave the green light to
spearhead the Take Me Home service.
The Pensacola PD worked in partnership
with SmartCOP, a Pensacola-based law
enforcement technology and software
company, to develop Take Me Home.
The Take Me Home system is a database
that is maintained at the Pensacola PD
of persons who may need special
assistance if they are alone. The
system includes a current, digital
picture, demographic information and
caregiver contacts. If a person in the
Take Me Home system is encountered by
a Pensacola Police Officer, the
officer can query the Take Me Home
system by name or by the person's
description to locate the person's
Take Me home enrollment record. With
the information at hand the officer
can appropriately assist the person.
The Take Me Home system is designed
for departments that utilize the
SmartCOP onboard patrol vehicle
computer technology. Over-the-air
dispatching is minimized. Caregivers
can be contacted by phone and provide
key information directly to the first
responder. Take Me Home is, of course,
voluntary for those who participate.
The Pensacola Police Department was
incepted in 1821 and continues to grow
not only in personnel but also in
technology, training and community
outreach efforts. About Take Me Home,
Chief Mathis recently said, "We are
excited to share with you this new
service designed to provide enhanced
service and protection to our
citizens. I strongly believe, and try
to instill the same philosophy in
others, that it is by working together
that we can make Pensacola an even
better place in which to live."
When it comes to the Take Me Home
program, Chief Mathis and the
Pensacola PD strive to make everywhere
a better place to live. The Take Me
Home system is available to ALL public
service agencies free of charge!!!
For further information and public
service agency inquiries about Take Me
Home, contact Crime Prevention Officer
Jimmy Donohoe at 850-436-5416 or email
jdonohoe@ci.pensacola.fl.us
Kudos to Chief Mathis, Inspector
Wendell Rich and Officer Jimmy Donohoe
for creating Take Me Home. Write
thanks to the Chief at:
Pensacola Police Department
711 North Haynes Street
Pensacola, FL 32501
Contact SmartCOP at: 270 North Palafox
Street, Pensacola, FL 32502, phone
850-429-0082

News
You Can Use
Our Friend Christina G. scours the
World Wide Web daily for
disability-related and newsworthy
articles. Free of opinion, Christina's
online news service is a daily
must-read for me. It's as the name
suggests:
News You Can Use!
I get it in the daily digest version.
Subscribe directly at
NewsYouCanUse@yahoogroups.com or
contact Christina
directly at:
christinag@mchsi.com
Thanks, Christina!

Police are Honored for Autism
Efforts
Virginian-Pilot
Virginia Beach, Virginia
by Margaret Windley
In late January, Beach police officer
Rachel McGraw and Mark Pantak spotted
a man breaking antennas off of cars in
the Lake Edward neighborhood. When the
officers approached him, the man
wasn't able to give his name or
address.
"We asked him to speak and he could
not talk to us," said McGraw. "But he
was doing the hand motions that are a
sign of Autism." The officers provided
a pen, pencil and some paper to divert
his attention and he wrote his first
name. After trying to find someone who
might know him at a local mental
health organization, the officers
checked the man's clothing and found
his full name. After running a check,
they were able to learn where he
lived. The incident was resolved
peacefully because the officers had
learned appropriate ways to work with
people with autism through Autism In
Law Enforcement, developed by U.S.
Deputy Marshal, Nick Proffitt.
Chief Jacocks received a plaque from
Autism Society and two officers,
Rachel McGraw and Mark Pantak, one of
whom could not be present, were
honored for using their training in
handling Autistic Individuals in
ceremonies on April 26 at the Law
Enforcement Training Academy. Chief
A.M. Jacocks Jr. received a plaque
from JoAnna Bryant, president of the
Tidewater Chapter of the Autism
Society of America for his willingness
to cooperate by providing proactive
police programs that help autistic
individuals and their families.

Autism Alert Window Gels
These gels alert first responders to
the presence in a vehicle of an
individual with autism. They can be
used on whatever vehicle you are
using, traveling in a rental car, for
instance. The multi-use, easy on-easy
off function offers great insurance! A
superb autism awareness & safety tool!
Available through Didi Zaryczny. Email
Didi at
dzaryczny947@aol.com

Silent No More
Communication Boards
The laminated board features 24 key
communication situations. It utilizes
picture icons and words and phrases in
English and Spanish as a way for first
responders to communicate with persons
with autism and other cognitive
conditions, as well as non English
speakers.
Contact Susan for details:
Email
srz@dol.net
Phone 610-274-2364

Autism & Law
Enforcement Video Update
The new Autism & Law Enforcement
Briefing Booklet is now available in
PDF format! The purchase of every
video comes with access to this
companion informational and
educational booklet that tracks the
video and offers supplemental
information.
It's available in PDF and comes in two
formats:
1) Prints out as a booklet
2) Prints out as 8 1/2 x 11
Purchasers can email their choice to
ddpi@flash.net and the file will
be emailed to you!
The Autism & Law Enforcement video
continues to receive fantastic
feedback and we're happy to announce
that selected excerpts can be viewed
online at the Dan Marino Foundation
ChildNett TV.
A big thanks to Doug
Bartel at the Dan Marino Foundation!
Here are two links:
NOTE: This is online TV
and not perfect. The full length video
itself was recorded and edited in
broadcast quality and is shipped in
VHS standard video cassette format.
Stills, information and ordering
options at:
http://www.risingbird.net/asr/email.html
Inquiries
about: Special Edits & Production
Runs, Excerpts or File Video
Information, Bulk Purchase or Site
License Inquiries, Pre Purchase or
Review copies: Email
ddpi@flash.net or call
772-398-9756. Brad may answer the
phone. Tell him Hi! All calls will be
returned!!

Book Orders Now
Online
Signed copies of Autism, Advocates and
Law Enforcement Professionals:
Recognizing and Reducing Risk
Situations for People with Autism
Spectrum Disorders, Dennis Debbaudt,
2002, Jessica Kingsley Publishers are
now available online via PayPal at
http://www.risingbird.net/asr/email.html

Rising Bird
Productions
A huge thanks goes out to Teresa
Soler, Brant Dutton and Tim Mueller of
Rising Bird Productions of Eugene,
Oregon!! They are the talented group
who created the site for the video.
We're working with them to launch the
new Autism & Law Enforcement web site.
work is progressing., We hope to
launch soon.
Rising Bird Productions are top shelf
Design, Publishing, Business Services
and Photography Professionals Consider
them for your on or off line needs.
They're part of the autism community!!
Check out their web site at:
http://www.RisingBird.net/

Autism &
Airport Travel Safety Tips
Here's a reprint of an article I wrote
back in 2001. Since summer is travel
time, I offer it here FYI.
Please visit the
Society for Accessible Travel &
Hospitality at
http://www.sath.org/
AUTISM & AIRPORT TRAVEL SAFETY TIPS
A guide
for parents and carers
Autism & Airport Travel Safety Tips
November 23, 2001, Port St. Lucie,
Florida
By Dennis Debbaudt
Traveling through airport security
will never be the same. Every traveler
passing through a security checkpoint
will now encounter waiting in long
lines, having to produce two forms of
picture identification at multiple
locations, mandatory questioning and
inspections of personal belongings by
strangers and the increasing
likelihood of a light touch from a
stranger holding a Geiger counter-like
sound producing wand. When you add to
the mix the possibility of a complete
physical frisk or pat down - and the
presence and scrutiny of armed,
uniformed paramilitary personnel and
contraband-sniffing dogs - the
accompanying sensory-enhancing
gauntlet of sounds lights and touch
can tax the system of any traveler let
alone one who has autism. This
experience has quickly become standard
operating procedure at U.S. airports.
People with autism, parents and
caregivers may want to consider taking
some extra measures to make passing
through a security checkpoint easier.
As daunting as a security checkpoint
is for some children and adults with
autism, we must consider the
point-of-view of the security
professional. The behavior or
characteristics of the child or adult
with autism may make the security
professional extremely anxious.
Consider the reliance on visual cues
and innocent echolalia a person with
autism may display, such as repeating
a phrase observed on a close-by
poster. At a security checkpoint that
phrase might include words that cite
the laws or warn against the use of
the words "bomb threat" or
"hijacking." Someone who repeats this
phrase would quickly come under
suspicion at a security checkpoint.
Those that repeat a question, run from
or blanche at passing through a metal
detector, or become over-anxious at
attempts to touch them would also
merit extra scrutiny. Left
unexplained, the behaviors and
characteristics of some person's with
autism may delay their trip and cause
unnecessary anxiety. These encounters
are the types of situations that can
easily escalate into
misinterpretations, verbal and
physical confrontations, physical
containment and restraint.
As reported in my latest book, Autism,
Advocates and Law Enforcement
Professionals (www.jkp.com) :
"Those with autism, parents and
caregivers may want to consider
carrying autism handout information
which would at least include a basic
autism brochure, and a person-specific
handout that at least includes their
picture, description, information
about behaviors that security may find
suspicious and the best way a security
professional can communicate with or
interact with that person. Many
parents find business card handouts
that might contain a message such as
'Perhaps my son/daughter's behavior is
surprising to you. This is because
he/she has autism', a brief definition
of autism, and the phone
number/website address of a local or
national advocacy organization."
These are grass roots, one-on-one
autism awareness campaigns. Make sure
to carry enough generic information to
leave behind with the security
professionals you may encounter.
Anyone reading this message can
download the informational handout
"Educating the Community...and Law
Enforcement" at
http://www.policeandautism.cjb.net/
make copies and hand them out.
If possible, make travel plans well in
advance. Call the airlines and
security companies (soon to be mainly
federalized) and ask what you can do
to help the security experience go
more smoothly for the person with
autism and the security professionals
they will interact with. If the trip
has to be made suddenly, arrive extra
early, bring plenty of handouts and
explain to the gate agent what your
needs are. Those that have the time
may want to inquire with their air
carrier about assistance plans they
may offer inexperienced travelers.
Northwest Airlines, for example,
offers the Adult Assistance Program
for a fee ranging from $40.00 to
$75.00. This may prove to be money
well spent. The program offers
personal assistance from check-in,
through security and boarding and
through the destination airport.
While the program does not assist with
eating, personal hygiene or medication
issues, it does provide assistance
through the crucial security
checkpoints. Parents and caregivers of
a passenger using travel assist can
also pass through security with their
loved even if they are not traveling
with them. Special security passes
would be issued in lieu of tickets. A
program like Northwest Airlines' Adult
Assistance could be utilized by
caregivers even if they are traveling
with a loved one.
Anticipating the worst is never a
pleasant proposition. But it's
something we do all the time in our
everyday lives when we put on seat
belts, lock our back doors, pay the
life insurance. The downside for not
doing these things is extremely
negative in each example. But do we
shudder in fear every time we do these
things? Of course not. They are common
sense options associated with everyday
life. Taking extra precautions is also
an everyday consideration that those
with autism that can, parents and
caregivers also become accustomed to
taking. When traveling through our
communities, and airports, taking the
precautions -alerting security,
carrying ID and informational
handouts, considering the needs of
others, anticipating the possibilities
-can help make our trips and travel a
lot safer and a lot more relaxing.
Give yourself at least two weeks to
seek the best that our airlines and
airport security can offer. But it's
never too late to alert the airlines
and security professionals to a
special request for assistance.
Contact author for reprint permission
at:
ddpi@flash.net
© Copyright 2001 by
Dennis Debbaudt
Special thanks to Mike Flotteron of
Northwest Airlines for his assistance
in preparing this report. Most major
airlines offer programs similar to the
Adult Assistance Program. Check with
your air carrier about special
travelers services they offer.
Here are links to other autism risk &
safety online articles:
Beyond Guilt or
Innocence, Dennis Debbaudt, EK Shriver
Juornal, 2004
Contact With
Individuals With Autism by Dennis
Debbaudt & Darla Rothman, Ph.D. FBI
Law Enforcement Bulletin April 2001
Edited for Sheriff Magazine Issue
March-April 2002

Upcoming
Conferences & Workshops
Wednesday September 15th Sunderland,
United Kingdom Autism Spectrum &
Criminal Justice Seminar, University
of Sunderland. email
ddpi@flash.net for details:
Friday through Sunday September 17th,
18th & 19th Herning, Denmark World
Autism Organization General Assembly
and Conference. The conference will
focus on conditions for people with
autism who live in the third world.
Presented by Dennis Debbaudt Autism &
Law Enforcement. Session Date & Time
(TBA)
More information at:
http://www.visitherning.com/UK/index.cfm?char_UserpageID=9AB2F5C4-A996-45C082F9F1D889C584C2&char_ParentID=5328B66C-5952-4B8A-9123CEFF149679AB
Tuesday and Wednesday September 28th
and 29th Grand Rapids, Michigan:
Adolescents and Young Adults With
Asperger Syndrome: The Real World at
the Eberhard Center, Grand Valley
State University
On the River in Downtown Grand Rapids!
Featuring:
Dennis
Debbaudt Session Wednesday 29th from
8:00 to 11:30 AM. All details at
http://www.unitingparadigms.com/pages/2/index.htm
Thursday September 30th, Green Bay,
Wisconsin. Email
ddpi@flash.net for details.
October and beyond: Orlando ( October
5th), New Hampshire October 7th &
8th), Lake Charles, Louisiana (October
18th), Chicago (October 28th)
Bloomington, Illinois (November 3rd),
St. John's, New Brunswick-with Walter
Coles (November 18th), Minneapolis
(December 3rd) and others to be
announced (TBA).
Several Fall dates are still open.
More Dates Announced Soon!! Inquiries?
Email:
ddpi@flash.net or call
772-398-9756 (Brad may answer phone)
for updates, new bookings or to
schedule an event. Now booking 2005
and beyond......

Thanks!!
A big thanks to Pam Weiseman and Anne
DeStefano of the Florida State
University Center for Autism and
Related Disabilities, everyone at the
Panhandle Chapter of the Autism
Society of America, and Officer Jimmy
Donohoe for welcoming me to Pensacola.
Jimmy took me to an Irish pub there
that featured 250,000 one dollar bills
that were signed by customers and
stapled to the ceiling. An experience
I won't soon forget! Great food, too!
I was also honored to present at the
35th ASA Conference Soaring To New
Heights in Seattle last week. A big
thanks go the ASA board and the Autism
Society of Washington for all their
hard work. The convention center and
Seattle were beautiful. Seeing so many
old friends and meeting new ones was
the highlight for me. We had a lot of
fun at the Friday Risk & Safety
session.
I also want to thank Detective
Specialist / Instructor Tony Favara of
the New York Police Department's
Emergency Service Unit (NYPD-ESU) for
inviting me to attend and complete the
40 hour Emergency Psychology
Technician Training Program Managing
Situations Involving Mentally
Disturbed Persons.
The
course is a special program of the
John Jay College of Criminal
Justice-City University of New York in
association with the NYPD-ESU and the
NYPD Hostage Negotiation Team (HNT).
Needless to say I learned a lot during
that week in June and was honored to
present to the class autism response
tips. The ESU and HNT will receive an
autism training package for their
future training sessions.
On that note I've met the requirements
for membership and joined the
American Society for Law Enforcement
Training (ASLET). From
www.aslet.org
The American Society for Law
Enforcement Training (ASLET) has been
described as the "Association for
those who teach and those who want to
learn and improve law enforcement
training." We are dedicated to
enhancing and promoting excellence in
law enforcement training while
increasing the effectiveness of our
members to better serve their
communities and society.
I'm dedicated to seeing autism issues
represented professionally to law
enforcement, first response, criminal
justice, and emergency response
professionals everywhere. We've come a
long way on this since the early
90's--yet there's still a long way to
go. With your help, we'll get there.
Again and always, I want to thank my
wife Gay and son Brad for allowing me
to get out here
and do this work.
Enjoy Summer!
Enjoy the summer weather, have some
fun and recharge those batteries!
The newsletter will be back in
September!
I'm always seeking feedback, advice
and information. Please send it my
way!
Please circulate far and wide! |