Arizona police officer told drowning man, 'I'm not jumping in after you,' as he begged for help, body-camera transcript shows
- A man who drowned in an Arizona lake last month begged for help, but the police didn't rescue him.
- "I'm not jumping in after you," one officer told the man, according to a police transcript.
A man drowned in an Arizona lake last month, and as he pleaded for help, struggling in the water, local police officers standing by refused to rescue him, according to officials and a body-camera-footage transcript.
"I'm drowning," Sean Bickings, 34, told Tempe Police Department officers during the May 28 incident at Tempe Town Lake, according to a video transcript released by the city and reviewed by Insider.
One officer responded to Bickings, "OK, I'm not jumping in after you," moments after another officer instructed Bickings to head over to a pylon, the transcript shows.
"Please help me. Please, please, please," Bickings said, according to the transcript. "I can't touch. Oh, God, please help me. Help me."
Bickings, whom city officials described as an "unsheltered Tempe community member," drowned after he jumped into the lake but wasn't able to swim.
Tempe police referred Insider to the city when asked for their response to the incident. In a statement, Tempe's city manager, Andrew Ching, and Police Chief Jeff Glover called Bickings' death "a tragedy."
Police body-camera footage released by the city shows what led up to the moments before Bickings jumped into the water.
Tempe officers were called to the scene just after 5 a.m. on May 28 about a reported dispute between Bickings and a woman who identified herself to police as his wife, officials said.
When officers arrived, they spoke with Bickings and the woman, who officials said cooperated with police and denied that any physical confrontation had taken place.
"He didn't do nothing wrong. We have a bad habit of interrupting each other sometimes," the woman told the officers, according to the police body-camera video.
Officials said Bickings climbed over a 4-foot metal fence and jumped into the water as cops were running the couple's names through a database to check on any outstanding arrest warrants as part of standard procedure.
"Neither were being detained for any offense," the city said of the couple.
Seconds before Bickings jumped into the water, he said to the officers, "I'm going to go for a swim," before adding, "I'm free to go, right?" the body-camera video shows.
The officers told Bickings that he was not allowed to swim in the lake.
"How far do you think he's going to be able to swim?" one officer asked, the footage shows.
Shortly after, an officer could be heard radioing that the "subject" had jumped into the lake.
The drowning was not included in the video footage released by police and, instead, a disclaimer was shown on the video before it ended: "Due to the sensitive nature of the remaining portion of the recording, a transcript of the sensitive portion of the event is being provided for full transparency."
Moments after Bickings went into the water, an officer asked him, "So what's your plan right now?"
"I'm going to drown," Bickings began saying. "I'm going to drown."
During the ordeal, police and Bickings' apparent wife argued, with her saying at one point, "I'm just distraught because he's drowning right in front of you and you won't help," according to the transcript.
Earlier in the transcript, an officer said to the woman: "If you want to help your husband, then talk to your husband, talk to your husband into coming over."
At one point, two officers said that another officer was "going to get the boat," the transcript says.
The city said Bickings "swam about 30-40 yards before repeatedly indicating he was in distress."
It added: "He soon went under and did not resurface."
The three Tempe police officers who didn't step in to save the drowning man were put on paid leave as the Arizona Department of Public Safety and Scottsdale Police Department investigated the officers' actions, the city said in a statement on Friday.