| NEWS | Seeking Answers The family of homeless teen who died in Phoenix police custody speaks out. BY ELIAS WEISS N ineteen-year-old Kailani Blair drove past the Circle K at West McDowell Road and North 91st Avenue in Maryvale on her way to work like she always does. She counted 10 police units in the gas station parking lot. “I wonder what’s going on there,” she thought to herself. She had no idea her brother, with whom she was very close, lay dead in that parking lot, obscured by white SUVs. It was Friday, June 10, and the 112 degrees outside was the highest tempera- ture ever recorded for that date in Phoenix, according to the National Weather Service in Phoenix. It was also the day Caleb Blair, also 19, died in police custody shortly before 3 p.m., after he tried to escape the heat. According to the Maricopa County Medical Examiner, Caleb’s body was extremely hot even after his death. “My son is gone,” Caleb’s father, Frank Blair, told Phoenix New Times in an inter- view last week. “I am still trying to process that.” Caleb had been homeless on the streets of Phoenix “for some time,” according to his father, who also said his son was battling a fentanyl addiction. On June 10, he sought relief from the torrid midday heat inside that west Phoenix convenience store. He asked if he could sit inside and cool down. A clerk inside the store told him no. Shortly after that, Caleb stripped off his clothes and was rolling on the ground and bashing his head on some cars just outside the store. He was “showing signs of impairment,” according to the Phoenix Police Department. Several units arrived on the scene. Although police were responding to a call “about an injured or sick person,” they quickly placed Caleb in handcuffs. It’s unclear who dialed 911. “That’s a huge response for one person who was unarmed,” Frank Blair said. Caleb’s death in Phoenix has echoes of George Floyd. In both incidents, cops responded to a Black man experiencing a fentanyl-fueled health crisis. It remains unclear why Blair was in handcuffs while EMTs tried to save his life. He remained shackled until his outlook worsened. “While receiving treatment, Blair lost consciousness,” Sergeant Vincent Cole said in a Friday press release. “His hand- cuffs were removed, and life-saving measures were given. Blair was later trans- ported to a local hospital where he died.” The actions of the officers will be subject to an internal and criminal investi- gation. In February, New Times reported that the commanding majority of Arizonans think police shouldn’t investi- gate themselves. Caleb’s family agrees. Frank Blair, a 60-year-old Black man who has spent his life in Colorado and Arizona, has met good cops and bad cops, “some of the worst,” he said. He sees a culture in the Phoenix Police Department that favors protecting white community members over Black people. “It only takes one apple to spoil the bunch,” he said. “I know that. I’ve lived that.” Caleb was described as “very respectful to the police” by his family. “With us as Black people, it’s not a matter of ‘if,’ it’s ‘when,’ no matter what your lifestyle is,” his father said. The police department will release a LinkedIn Glendale teen Caleb Blair was a fentanyl addict with a loving heart, his father Frank said in his first comments to the press since his son died in police custody on June 10, 2022. critical incident briefing on this incident on June 24, Sergeant Philip Krynsky told New Times. The briefing will contain audio, visuals, and information related to the death. The police department does not comment on active investigations, Krynsky confirmed. It’s frustrating for Caleb’s family, whose members are still searching for clarity about their loved one’s death. Police told reporters he died at a local hospital, but Frank Blair recalls being told he died in the parking lot. “I still don’t know where my son died,” he said. Frank Blair visited the Circle K before sunrise the morning after the tragedy. He was there for several hours, reflecting on his son’s life. Caleb was one of 12 siblings and the youngest of five boys. He was exceptionally close to his two youngest sisters, rarely spotted doing anything without them. He practiced taekwondo and played football at Copper Canyon High School in Glendale, where he also took an interest in the STEM fields. He was a gifted diesel mechanic, according to his family. “Caleb had a drug problem,” his father said. “But he was a highly intelligent, very loving, and sharing individual.” Friends and family describe Caleb as witty and precocious. However, there were two sides to the teen. “When he was not in his right mind on drugs, he could not live with us,” Frank Blair said. “But I made it my business to track him down.” Frank Blair spent 20 hours every week searching for his son, sitting with him, giving him food and water. When they last saw each other, Frank gave Caleb a tent and a cellphone. He didn’t know he would never see his son again. But he “wasn’t taken aback” when cops broke the somber news on Friday night, either. “I wasn’t sure that he was going to live very long, but he was doing better and it looked like he was coming back to us,” said Caleb’s father, who lost another son in a shooting. “He said he was going to come home in August and try to start over and clean himself up. I was worried that he wouldn’t make it that far. And I was right.” 12 JUNE 23RD– JUNE 29TH, 2022 PHOENIX NEW TIMES | MUSIC | CAFE | FILM | CULTURE | NIGHT+DAY | FEATURE | NEWS | OPINION | FEEDBACK | CONTENTS | phoenixnewtimes.com