Officer commits suicide at MotorCity blackjack table

DETROIT (AP) - An off-duty suburban police officer fatally shot himself yesterday while playing blackjack in the high-stakes gambling area of the MotorCity Casino, police said.

The man was playing a $100-minimum game in a VIP room when he shot himself about 4 p.m., Detroit police Inspector William Rice said. No one else was injured.

"He lost a hand and then he pulled out a weapon and shot himself," Rice said.

The man was in his 30s or 40s, Rice said. Police were withholding his identity until his relatives could be notified. Oak Park police Lt. Jeffrey Brackett confirmed that the man was an Oak Park officer but declined further comment.

"We're very disturbed about this," said MotorCity Casino spokesperson Jack Barthwell. "It's a terrible thing to have happen any place."

It is illegal to bring a gun inside the casino, Barthwell said.

The casino does not have metal detectors, he said, but "we will review our security precautions and see if steps need to be taken."

Police said they were investigating how much money the man had been gambling and whether he had come to the casino alone.

"We're still trying to compile his betting history and whether or not in fact he's been here before," Rice said.

MotorCity's high-roller-friendly fourth floor features $100 slot machines and blackjack tables with minimum bets of $100 to $500. That area was closed while police investigated, Rice said. The rest of the casino remained open and people continued to gamble.

The National Council on Problem Gambling, citing various studies, says one in five pathological gamblers attempts suicide. A 1998 Harvard Medical School study estimated that 1.6 percent of the adults in the United States and Canada had experienced pathological gambling at some point in their life.

But it often is difficult to determine a specific reason why someone kills himself, said Carol O'Hare, executive director of the Nevada Council on Problem Gambling.

"Short of someone leaving a note that 'The reason I killed myself is ... ,' there's a lot of armchair detective work to determine what chain of events caused someone to do that," O'Hare said. "Frequently, what you have is things playing together. Many times you have drinking problems or marital problems."


Originally on page 3A in the 1-27-2000 issue of the Daily.

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