About Jim

There was an immediate and complex attempt to rob James Chase of his identity by politicizing his death. From the officers describing him as a drug dealer, to the mayor’s focus on his mental illness, we lost track of the man who had been killed. Portland mayor Tom Potter wrote to the Mental Health Association in November 2007: “I am deeply concerned that the safety net has frayed to the point that we must ask our police officers to be the first responders for too many folks with mental health issues.”

James was a notable person. He was gifted. He inspired and he had a great effect on others. He had a family who loved and cared for him. He was not a victim or a failure or hurt by the mental health system. Quite to the contrary, Alien Boy will show James was one of its successes.

James didn’t die from his mental illness – he was beaten and died on the streets of his hometown. His death was brutal, shameful and preventable. Only a full, public account of who James was and what happened to him can prevent another tragedy.

The community responded to James’ death.

These responses do not completely address the police brutality which Jim’s death, but nonetheless are a net benefit in his legacy, and other changes are afoot. Alien Boy will examine this legacy.

At 15 Chasse was an influential, some would say prophetic, member of Portland’s late seventies DIY punk scene. James edited his own magazine, Oregon Organizm, and was a good friend of The Wipers’ lead singer, Greg Sage.

Sage, whose creative immediacy inspired whole new genres of music, posted the lyrics to his haunting 1979 song “Alien Boy” as a memorial to James:

Go and grab your gun / Got him on the run / Cause he’s an alien / They hurt what they don’t understand

So you got to turn away / There’s no other way / You’re an alien / They hurt what they don’t understand

“It is so rare to meet someone his age that has such a depth of spirit and insight that age has no boundaries or equations but gives you a sense of timelessness.”

The Wipers’ lead singer, Greg Sage, 2006