After Sen. Creigh Deeds Tragedy, State Officials Removed Damning Reports From Website

deedsflag

(1-18-16) State officials have quietly removed two years worth of Inspector General reports from a government website that showed they were aware of a dangerous hospital bed shortage at least two years before state Senator Creigh Deeds and his son were told no hospital beds were available and turned away with tragic results.

When Deeds drove his mentally ill son, Austin “Gus” Deeds, to a mental health center on November 18, 2013, he was informed no local hospital beds were available and sent home. Later that day, Gus stabbed his father repeatedly before ending his own life. Sen. Deeds has filed a $6 million dollar wrongful death lawsuit against state mental health officials, claiming negligence.

The IG reports, which could help Deeds’ legal case, were removed from the Office of State Inspector General website sometime after May 2014 at roughly the same time speculation about the state’s liability began making the rounds at the state capitol in Richmond.

A spokesman for State Inspector General June Jennings told me in an email on Friday (1-15)  that the missing IG reports were removed by the Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS), which oversees 16 state facilities and assists 40 local Community Service Boards in delivering mental health services. The DBHDS is a defendant in Deeds’ wrongful death lawsuit. An official at the DBHDS, however, told me Friday that it was Jennings’ office that decided to remove the reports from its website.

Jennings’s spokesperson said the IG reports have not been destroyed. They are stored in the IG Office’s electronic archives. While still available, removing them from the IG website makes them much more difficult for the public and for Deeds’ attorneys to identify, locate and read.

The content of those reports go to the heart of Deeds’ wrongful death lawsuit.

Click to continue…

Guest Blog: Deliver Us From Evil – Gun Violence, Stigma and Mental Illness

guns

On Monday (1-11-15) I posted a blog about pathology and gun violence. Long-time mental health advocate and former member of the national Board of Directors of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Graham L. Champion today offers his point-of-view about gun violence and mental illness. He can be reached at  psllc06@gmail.com

Deliver Us from Evil

by

Graham L. Champion

During our lives, most everyone of us has at some time or another uttered the words “deliver us from evil.” It may have been as part of the Lord’s Prayer or after a particularly heinous act that we have witnessed or been informed about by the press or it might simply be the result of some action in our life that was particularly disturbing. Evil comes in many different forms from violence to harassment to intimidation to mention but just a few.

In recent times, we have seen senseless mass killings in a variety of different locations. Virtually every time one of these mass shootings happens the media is quick to speculate that if the event was not terror related —  it must have been committed by someone who is mentally deranged. Mental illness has become the “go to” explanation for why someone goes out and shoots up the landscape.

Just as predictably the discussion goes to the issue that we, as a society, need to find a way to better identify those with mental health issues and prevent them from having access to firearms. It is without question that those individuals living with a serious and chronic mental illness, during times of crisis, should not be allowed to purchase a firearm. With that premise in mind, we, as a society, must begin to destigmatize mental health issues and provide treatment for those living with a diagnosed mental health issue.

Click to continue…

The Role of Psychopathy in Horrific Crimes

gun-violence

Two women meet, fall in love and become one of the first gay couples to legally marry only to have their lives shattered when they are sexually attacked in their home and one of them is viciously murdered. Incredibly, the survivor in this true life crime story forgives the rapist/murderer. And yes, that man has a mental illness.

The book’s publisher sent me a pre-publication copy of this story because he hoped I would write a “blurb” — one of those gushing quotes printed on book covers to lure buyers. Although the writer did an excellent job explaining how deinstitutionalization and a lack of community mental health services have led to our jails and prisons becoming defacto mental asylums, I declined.

Book blurbs are one or two sentences and I couldn’t write an endorsement in twenty words that explained the perpetrator in this book was not typical. Most persons with mental illnesses are not dangerous. They are not rapists and murderers. They are more likely to be victims rather than committers of crimes.

Yet, here was an example of a mentally disturbed man who was very dangerous and very violent. How do we explain his actions?

Click to continue…

Post Columnist Defends Deeds’ Lawsuit, Cites My Blogs Warning About “Streeting”

deedsgus

Deeds in happier times with his son, Gus.

Before anyone feels sorry for state mental health officials who are being sued by Virginia state Senator Creigh Deeds, they should do what my favorite columnist at The Washington Post has done. Take time to read several blogs that I wrote about an Inspector General report that was issued twenty-two months before Deeds was told there were no local mental health beds available and was sent home with his son, Gus, who desperately needed psychiatric treatment.

A fair-minded but tough state Inspector General named G. Douglas Bevelacqua wrote a damning report in 2012 that exposed how Virginia hospitals were  “streeting” psychotic patients. That was the term emergency room doctors used when they turned patients away because there were no crisis care beds available. Bevelacqua, who cared passionately about mental health reform, warned the state’s Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services that Virginia had a bed shortage problem that needed to be fixed. Immediately.

No one listened.

After the Deeds’ tragedy,  state mental health officials issued a self-serving report that made it sound as if they had paid attention to Bevelacqua’s findings, but simply hadn’t been able to implement his recommendations in time to prevent the Deeds’ tragedy. Bull.

Rather than fessing up, those officials began circling the wagons, so much so, that Bevelacqua resigned in protest, claiming that his boss was pressuring him to water down an investigation of how state mental health officials had bungled the entire “streeting” crisis. His boss,  Michael F.A. Morehart  subsequently released the report that Bevelacqua had refused to sign and did exactly what Bevelacqua had predicted. His report didn’t take anyone to task for their failure to address “streeting” in time to save Gus Deeds.

Click to continue…

Sen. Creigh Deeds Sues Mental Health Officials, New York Gov. Orders Homeless Off The Streets, Philanthropist Ted Stanley Dies

deeds

Virginia state Sen. Creigh Deeds has filed a $6 million wrongful death suit against mental health workers, New York’s governor is ordering local governments to take homeless individuals off the streets during frigid weather and mental health philanthropist Ted Stanley has died.

These three stories caught my eye this week. I’ve printed the Washington Post’s account of Deeds’ lawsuit at the end of this blog. Deeds is suing the state, the mental health agency that serves his community, and the mental health evaluator who failed to find a hospital bed for his son, Gus, who was sent home untreated. Gus attacked his father before killing himself. Mental health workers are understandably concerned about the suit.

Should a mental health provider and evaluator be held responsible for not providing treatment?

I am surprised that New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo’s decision to force homeless people into shelters once the temperature drops to 32 degrees Fahrenheit or below isn’t getting much attention. “It’s about love. It’s about compassion. It’s about helping one another and basic human decency,” Cuomo told reporters.

That common sense compassion caused an uproar when New York Mayor Ed Koch announced in 1985  that he would begin taking homeless, mentally ill individuals off the street at night during freezing temperatures. New York’s American Civil Liberties Union sued for the release of Joyce Brown, a homeless, psychotic women who had been forcibly removed and hospitalized. She had spent more than a year living on a steam grate clad at times only in a cotton blouse and skirt with socks on her feet and a sheet wrapped around her body during frigid nights. Brown would rip up money she panhandled, run into traffic, and expose her bare buttocks and scream racial slurs and profanities. A New York judge ruled in favor of releasing Brown back to her steam grate, stating that Brown was “an experienced street professional” and therefore fully capable of being homeless. The city appealed that ruling and won, but the ACLU lawyers continued the fight and eventually Brown was ordered released. You can read an excellent account of that case in Madness in the Streets, by Rael Jean Isaac and Virginia C. Armat. 

Click to continue…

My New Year Resolution For 2016: I’m Going To Be Hopeful

 

Start on January 1

My father was a strong believer in New Year resolutions. He said it was important to examine your life periodically and ask: “What can I be doing better?” My father died last February at age 94. His death made me think about his words and resolutions that I might make for 2016.

Resolution Number One: Being hopeful.

That sounds simple, but being hopeful often is difficult when dealing with mental illnesses.

When my book, CRAZY: A Father’s Search Through America’s Mental Health Madness, was published, there were 365,000 individuals with mental illnesses in American jails and prisons. Ten years later, some estimate that figure at 500,000. A recent study found that persons with mental illnesses are the fastest growing subpopulation inside California prisons. Every other segment in those institutions has decreased. But the proportion of inmates with serious mental illnesses has increased from 19 percent in 2007 to 26 percent today.

Click to continue…