Justice for Biagio: Demand an Independent Investigation & Mental Health Crisis Reform


Justice for Biagio: Demand an Independent Investigation & Mental Health Crisis Reform
The Issue
On January 7, 2026, 27-year-old Biagio Kauvil called 911 three times from his mother's home in Hinsdale, Massachusetts and hung up each time. He had locked himself in a bedroom, armed but in acute suicidal crisis. He was afraid of what help might look like. That fear, tragically, proved justified.
Officers responded and spent nearly an hour attempting to de-escalate the situation. But when an ambulance was finally staged and ready to transport Biagio to the hospital, a decision was made to breach the bedroom door. In the 43 seconds that followed, Biagio was shot and killed by a Hinsdale police officer.
The Berkshire District Attorney has found the shooting legally justified. But lawful force is not the same as best practice, and the DA himself called for an independent review of Hinsdale Police Department policies, citing "considerable concern."
As NAACP Berkshire County Branch President Dennis Powell writes in the Berkshire Eagle, the community's work is far from over. You can read his full commentary here.
Here is what demands accountability:
No mental health co-responder was present — even though officers were executing a planned involuntary mental health commitment and an ambulance was already on scene. The day before, an FBI welfare notice had been issued for Biagio. When officers entered the room, his first words were "Kill me. Kill me." — the words of a person in suicidal crisis, not a threat. The decision to breach the door was a choice, not an inevitability.
Biagio's family has endured nearly four months of grief compounded by silence. They, and this community, deserve more than a legal determination. They deserve answers and a commitment that this will not happen again.
We are calling on:
- The Town of Hinsdale to appoint an independent investigator — with no prior affiliation to the town or its police department — to formally review training, policies, and the decision to breach the bedroom door. Do this within 30 days.
- The Berkshire County Legislative Delegation to convene a public hearing on crisis response protocols countywide, including the absence of mental health co-responders in this and similar incidents.
- Law Enforcement Agencies across Berkshire County to require trained mental health co-responders any time they respond to a mental health crisis — and to document in writing any instance where such resources are not used.
The law has spoken to the 43 seconds inside that bedroom. Now it is the responsibility of this community — its elected officials, its institutions, and its residents — to speak to everything that came before.
Sign this petition. Stand with the Kauvil family. Demand accountability.
Endorsed by the NAACP Berkshire County Branch

299
The Issue
On January 7, 2026, 27-year-old Biagio Kauvil called 911 three times from his mother's home in Hinsdale, Massachusetts and hung up each time. He had locked himself in a bedroom, armed but in acute suicidal crisis. He was afraid of what help might look like. That fear, tragically, proved justified.
Officers responded and spent nearly an hour attempting to de-escalate the situation. But when an ambulance was finally staged and ready to transport Biagio to the hospital, a decision was made to breach the bedroom door. In the 43 seconds that followed, Biagio was shot and killed by a Hinsdale police officer.
The Berkshire District Attorney has found the shooting legally justified. But lawful force is not the same as best practice, and the DA himself called for an independent review of Hinsdale Police Department policies, citing "considerable concern."
As NAACP Berkshire County Branch President Dennis Powell writes in the Berkshire Eagle, the community's work is far from over. You can read his full commentary here.
Here is what demands accountability:
No mental health co-responder was present — even though officers were executing a planned involuntary mental health commitment and an ambulance was already on scene. The day before, an FBI welfare notice had been issued for Biagio. When officers entered the room, his first words were "Kill me. Kill me." — the words of a person in suicidal crisis, not a threat. The decision to breach the door was a choice, not an inevitability.
Biagio's family has endured nearly four months of grief compounded by silence. They, and this community, deserve more than a legal determination. They deserve answers and a commitment that this will not happen again.
We are calling on:
- The Town of Hinsdale to appoint an independent investigator — with no prior affiliation to the town or its police department — to formally review training, policies, and the decision to breach the bedroom door. Do this within 30 days.
- The Berkshire County Legislative Delegation to convene a public hearing on crisis response protocols countywide, including the absence of mental health co-responders in this and similar incidents.
- Law Enforcement Agencies across Berkshire County to require trained mental health co-responders any time they respond to a mental health crisis — and to document in writing any instance where such resources are not used.
The law has spoken to the 43 seconds inside that bedroom. Now it is the responsibility of this community — its elected officials, its institutions, and its residents — to speak to everything that came before.
Sign this petition. Stand with the Kauvil family. Demand accountability.
Endorsed by the NAACP Berkshire County Branch

299
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Petition created on April 29, 2026