Showing posts with label mentally ill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mentally ill. Show all posts

Saturday, August 21, 2010

DA: We Agree You're Crazy, Now Plead Guilty!

Cynthia Hubert at the SacBee.com is reporting the storyof the mentally ill woman being held in the Sacramento jail.  According to the account, the taxpayers are paying tens of thousands of dollars to keep her in lock-up despite the fact that she has private health insurance that will pay for residential mental health services--the only problem, the district attorney insists that she plead guilty to a crime before he will let her go.  Here's an excerpt from the story:

"Accused of assaulting a peace officer, Tracy Sinclair Feather has been behind bars for 3 1/2 months. She has suffered from bipolar and other disorders since she was a teenager, and her spiraling mental condition – she has tried to harm herself numerous times in the downtown jail and has attempted suicide at least twice – has cost the county tens of thousands of dollars for treatment during her incarceration.

Feather's lawyer said her client has private insurance and could serve her time in a locked mental facility at no cost to taxpayers.   But the path through the criminal justice system is complicated, particularly when the defendant is seriously mentally ill. The county District Attorney's Office wants Feather to plead guilty to a felony before being allowed to transfer out of the jail to serve six months in a 'locked facility,' most likely a hospital.

'We can't release a defendant while a case is still pending,' said Shelly Orio, a spokeswoman for the district attorney.  'Our top priority is protecting public safety. We can't just let her go without accountability or monitoring.'

Feather's attorney, Dennise Henderson, has resisted a plea deal so far, saying Feather did not commit a felony during a brief standoff with Sacramento police officers on May 2.  But her client's mental condition has deteriorated so dramatically, Henderson said, that she may have no choice but to accept the offer. A hearing on the matter is scheduled for today.  'I am very bothered by this resolution,' said Henderson. 'But this is the problem when a mental health case becomes tangled in the criminal system. Tracy does not function well in jail, because she has never been there before. It is not a place for someone who is mentally ill.'

Yet more people with mental illnesses are showing up in jails and courtrooms, as cuts in social safety net programs leave them with less access to services and medications. In California, jails and prisons have become 'today's de facto mental health treatment facilities,' says a new report by a task force studying the issue for the Administrative Office of the Courts. A recent study found that four times as many mentally ill people in the state are in jails or prisons as in psychiatric hospitals.

The human and financial costs are high, according to the report. In 2008, the cost of a bed for 'acute mental health services' in a psychiatric unit of county jails in San Mateo and Santa Clara was $1,350 a day, it says. Sacramento County figures likely are close, officials said. Local police confirm that officers are encountering more mentally ill people since Sacramento County began cutting mental health services to close a mammoth budget deficit. Psychotic patients also are jamming emergency rooms and jails, officials have told The Bee. . .

In a jailhouse interview and in records supplied by her lawyer, Feather said that more than once during her stay, she was forced to lie on the floor of an empty 'classroom,' handcuffed and shackled, after deputies told her they had no room for her in the psychiatric unit.  She has tried to harm herself numerous times, banging her head against objects and once tying her jail-issued pants around her neck in a suicide attempt, the records show.

They also show that deputies have placed her in physical restraints, including the controversial Prostraint chair, several times.   In her interview, Feather was weepy and trembling as she described her experiences. 'Every day I try not to kill myself,' she said.

Prior to budget cuts that closed the crisis center at the county's mental hospital and slashed outpatient services, Feather, 48, had been stable for years.  Before her dust-up with the police, she lived independently in a midtown cottage owned by her mother, where she cared for her husband, a retired psychiatrist who suffers from dementia and other health problems. She managed her medications, kept house and prepared meals.

After her county services fell away, Feather began to spiral downward, relatives said. Without the crisis center to turn to, she told The Bee, she started calling police when she was suicidal or desperate.

On May 2, she called police to report she wanted to kill herself and emerged from her home with a knife. She has since said she had no intention of harming anyone but herself, but police perceived her behavior as a threat. Officers deployed a Taser, then handcuffed and arrested her. She has been in jail since, with bail set at $500,000.

Henderson, her lawyer, has been negotiating to have her transferred to a locked mental facility until the case is resolved, but the District Attorney's Office has refused to allow it without a guilty plea.

In exchange for the 'non-strike' felony plea, the district attorney is proposing that Feather serve 180 days in a locked facility, most likely a hospital if a bed is available, Orio said. But Henderson said it is unlikely that any mental facility will keep her that long, so once she becomes stable she could end up back in jail. Henderson is pushing for the DA to credit the time Feather already has served toward her sentence.

Both sides are scheduled to appear in court today on the matter.

Feather told a reporter that she believes she is innocent and would like to try her case before a jury, but not if it means staying in jail for months longer.   'I want to apologize to Sacramento for all of this,' she said tearfully.  'If I were younger and stronger and my husband were healthy, I would like to carry the flag and go to trial. But right now I just can't."
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Where is the logic in all of this?

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Arrested 74 Times in 2 Years

You want true crime stories from American Justice, there's nothing like reading the local news websitees.  In this story from the Cincinnati Enquirer website, we have the pathetic tale of Douglas Robinson (pic) arrested 74 times in 2 years.  This is from the Enquirer story: 

Douglas Robinson has been arrested so many times in the last two years – 74 times, to be exact – that social service agencies in the area put him on a list of people they wanted to help the next time he was arrested.


That happened Monday, resulting in a maximum 90-day jail sentence on charges of solicitation and possession of illegal drugs. But when one of the agency people called the jail to make sure Robinson was held, he found that Robinson was already free -- released due to overcrowding, much like the other times he was arrested.  Hamilton County’s director of pretrial services, Wendy Niehaus, said it’s frustrating, but that she and her staff understand the difficult position Hamilton County Sheriff Simon Leis is in as jailer.  'The sheriff has to prioritize,' Niehaus said. 'Is it Douglas that he keeps? Or is the person charged with aggravated robbery? That’s the bottom line.'

But when Robinson is released, it doesn’t improve the situation for anyone, she said. 'He’s part of a marginalized population that sucks up resources, just not the right kind,' Niehaus said.  Leis closed 800 jail beds in December 2008 because of budget cuts, reducing the space to hold inmates by a third. Voters have twice rejected tax increases to pay for a new jail or a jail expansion.  That means lots of people are released simply because there is not room to keep them and others get out early. Last year more than 20,000 inmates were released because of overcrowding, according to an Enquirer analysis.

Earlier this month Hamilton County Municipal Judge Richard Bernat reported that he walked out of the justice center after conducting a series of bond hearings and saw a person he sentenced to spend 90 days in jail on a theft charge less than an hour earlier. The jail was so full that woman was told to come back in March to serve her time.

Robinson’s criminal history dates to spring 2008, when he was kicked out of a homeless shelter after being accused of theft. Records show the 50-year-old Robinson became a chronic problem downtown.  He has been arrested 73 times since, on 153 charges, records show. Mostly he’s arrested for panhandling and trespassing, sometimes also with resisting arrest.  Robinson was arrested Tuesday on a charge of possession of drugs and tampering with evidence after Cincinnati police officers say they saw him on Pleasant Street with crack cocaine and a pipe to smoke it.

Hamilton County Municipal Judge Ted Berry was so shocked when he saw Robinson’s record Wednesday that he asked if it was a typographical error. It wasn’t a mistake, courtroom staff assured him. Berry set Robinson’s bond at $9,500.  The Enquirer used court records to report that Robinson had been arrested 96 times. A review of his jail stays shows he has been arrested 74 times since May 2008.
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Meanwhile, in Maricopa County, Arizona--they have so much money the Sheriff can voluntarily go into the federal (!) immigration law enforcement business;  hire $1000 per hour attorneys to sue the County's other elected officials who in turn hire outside counsel to defend the lawsuits.  All the while arresting anyone who looks suspicious.  American justice is . . .  a crazy shitstorm.