My Son Kevin Posts His First Blog On This Website

Kevin and I spoke at a Washington D.C. mental health fundraiser – a few years ago in black tie near the White House

(1-22-26) I’m proud that my son, Kevin (known as Michael in my book), posted his first blog on this website today. Look for the tab that says: Kevin’s blog.

I’ve encouraged him to write about his mental illness, his recovery, and his work as a certified peer and recovery specialist.  I happily pass the “blog baton” to him as I continue to focus on my health and family. I will be curious to read his thoughts. I hope you will be too.

Thank you for your continued support and dedication to reforming our mental health system.

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My Cancer, My Son, My Advice — Savor Each Moment & Be Thankful

Celebrating with Patti

(11-21-25) My wonderful cancer doctor, Dr. Alexander Spira, with Virginia Cancer Specialists, told me this morning that a recent CT scan showed the cancer in my right lung remains in remission. It has not grown or spread!

Studies show that 60 percent of the patients taking my life-saving medication live five years of more. I am coming up on my two-year anniversary.

Being told you have Stage Four non-small cell carcinoma (BTW: I never smoked) hits you like a bucket of ice water in the face. After receiving that diagnosis, I decided to retire from writing and focus on my health, my supportive spouse Patti, our grandchildren and our family. I also began checking off adventures on a bucket list.

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NAMI Dominates Non-Profit Rivals With $35 Million in 2024 Revenues, $62.7 Million Net Assets

(11-18-25) Tis the season for charitable giving so emails asking for donations are starting to appear in my inbox. Before writing checks, I like to check on the finances of mental health non-profits.

Here are snippets from four national mental health organizations: the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Mental Health America, the Treatment Advocacy Center and the Depression Bipolar Support Alliance. 

Guidestar (now called Candid) posts federal Form 990 tax reports.

It lists NAMI’s gross revenues on its 2024 tax report at $35 million with assets worth a minimum of $62.7 million.  That is tremendous growth since I first became a lifelong member of NAMI in 2006. Back then, it only reported $5.8 million in net assets and often struggled to raise funds.

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Crying Autistic “Child” Arrested By Florida Prosecutors For Threatening Donald Trump

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(6-21-25) Ridiculous! The federal government agreed to drop charges but not state authorities.

Guest Post via email:

Hi Pete,  Nick Gallo can’t read or write, has the mental capacity of a child, and an IQ of 50. However, he is accused of posting threats against President Trump. The video of his arrest really paints the picture of who Nick is and what he understands.

Federal prosecutors have dropped their case, citing his cognitive limitations.

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A Graphic Read About Isolation In America’s Toughest Prison Told Through The Eyes Of A Convicted Murderer

(11-25-24) THIS IS NOT ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH.

My twenty-second and last book, No Human Contact: Solitary Confinement, Maximum Security and Two Inmates Who Changed the System, is not for the faint of heart because it describes – often in graphic detail and from a convict’s point of view – life imprisonment in the harshest conditions allowed under the U.S. Constitution.

For 33 years, I corresponded with Thomas Silverstein, who murdered three people while in America’s most secure penitentiary, including a correctional officer. A member of the notorious prison gang, the Aryan Brotherhood, Silverstein spent 36 years in isolation yet he found meaning in his life and ultimately rejected the gang.

His story raises questions about whether nurture or nature creates a killer.

I met him in 1987 in the bowels of Leavenworth prison where I asked him about his decision to attack and savagely stab Merle Clutts, a veteran officer.

Listen to Pete Earley’s taped interview with Thomas Silverstein describing murder that he committed.

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A First-Of-Its- Kind Licensed Treatment Center Inside A Jail: Is This The Future In Corrections?

Nashville’s Behavior Care Center is a first-of-its-kind, licensed mental health/addiction treatment facility built inside a jail complex.

(11-22-2024) Are residential mental health and addiction centers located inside jails in our future? Should they be?

Earlier this month, I spoke to an elite group of sheriffs in Nashville attending a Large Jail Network conference. The LJN is composed of senior officials from the largest jails in the United States. This meeting focused on jails becoming the de facto largest public mental health facilities in our country. (The LJN was established in 1989 by the National Institute of Corrections, a part of the U.S. Justice Department.)

Nashville was chosen because Davidson County Sheriff Daron Hall operates a first-of-its-kind 60-bed Behavioral Care Center (BCC) as part of his jail. This is not a separate cellblock where arrestees with mental illnesses and/or addictions are housed and seen by a visiting psychiatrist or social workers. The BCC is a state licensed, residential treatment center adjacent to the jail where individuals charged with crimes – that are clearly linked to their addiction and/or mental illnesses – can have the criminal charges against them dropped if they complete a rigorous treatment regime while incarcerated.Click to continue…