Trending Topics

Tenn. man in mental health crisis shoots at law enforcement drones during EMS call

An EMS call in Bradley County escalated when a combative patient returned home and fired at law enforcement drones used for negotiation

FR1 Affiliate images - 2025-11-21T083739.583.jpg

A Bradley County EMS ambulance.

Bradley County EMS/Facebook

By Mason Edwards
Chattanooga Times Free Press

BRADLEY COUNTY, Tenn. — A man fired shots at law enforcement drones during a mental health crisis Monday before surrendering, according to the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office .

Deputies were called to a home in northeast Bradley County near Urbane Road to help paramedics and firefighters after a medical call escalated into a combative encounter, according to a press release. The first responders evacuated the home, and officers searched the nearby neighborhood for the man involved.

When the man returned home, a Bradley County Sheriff’s Office drone dropped a cell phone so negotiators could speak to him. During the talks, Possien fired at the deputies’ drone and a Cleveland Police Department drone being used to help, officials said.

The drones weren’t damaged, according to Lt. Robert Jones, assistant director for communications for the Bradley County Sheriff’s Office. A spokesperson for the Cleveland Police Department did not immediately answer an after-hours email asking about the incident.

Possien surrendered and was taken to the hospital for treatment. He now faces charges of felony reckless endangerment, vandalism for damage to an EMS cot and two counts of assault on a first responder, officials said. He is currently held at the county jail with no bond.

The Bradley County Sheriff’s Office has operated a drone team since 2016, Jones said by email, and it currently flies Autel Evo Max series drones, which are used for search and rescue, suspect apprehension, locating lost or missing people, assessing natural disasters and a wide range of other missions.

Trending
Tips for the unique challenges of accessing and extricating patients from recreational trails
The new World Trade Center Retired Responders Memorial Wall honors 154 retired FDNY members who assisted in rescue and recovery efforts after Sept. 11 and later died from WTC-related illnesses
Shippensburg Area EMS uses a paramedic interceptor model to provide ALS across a wider area, but officials say the program creates reimbursement and funding challenges
Seattle’s fire department used artificial intelligence for more than two years to analyze medical 911 calls raising questions about transparency, privacy and oversight

© 2025 the Chattanooga Times/Free Press (Chattanooga, Tenn.).
Visit www.timesfreepress.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Company News
Connect daily vehicle inspections with maintenance workflows in a single, streamlined platform to enhance compliance and uptime for mission-critical fleets