A Correction And More Troubling Questions About Woman’s Taser Death in Fairfax Jail

2-11-2015  I need to correct an error that I made in writing Tuesday about Natasha McKenna, the 37 year old African American woman who suffered cardiac arrest after her encounter with law enforcement in the Fairfax County jail. I am happy to do this because my goal is to uncover the truth and also because this information confirms what those of us in the mental health community fear.

This is an instance where someone with a mental illness is acting oddly. The police are called and an altercation happens, resulting in charges being filed and the person with mental illness ending up becoming entrapped in the criminal justice system.

I was initially told by my sources and wrote that McKenna had been charged with simple assault. That was incorrect. Please read the official statement printed below from the Alexandria police.  A spokesperson told me that three of the six officers involved in the initial contact with McKenna were CIT trained and that one of them was a CIT instructor.

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Troubled Woman Dies In Fairfax: Shot 4 Times With Taser After A Week In Isolation Cell

2-10-2015

Can you imagine being arrested on a minor charge,  stripped naked and put into a solitary jail cell for a week with nothing in it?

Can you imagine being slapped in the head by a corrections officer because you didn’t comply with an order that you didn’t understand?

Can you image having five men dressed like Ninja warriors wearing football-like helmets with visors attempting to violently tie you to a chair?

Can you imagine voltage from a Taser being shot into your body not once, not twice, not three times, but four times until your body goes into cardiac arrest?

Can you imagine being rushed by EMTs to a hospital where your urine soaked body looks so horrific that the emergency room crew is sickened by what they witness?

This is not some tale of torture filtering from Abu Ghraib prison.

All of this happened last week here in Fairfax County, Virginia, a wealthy suburb of Washington D.C. where elected officials have stuck their heads in the sand when it comes to facing what now is being revealed as our grim reality.

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Sensational Headline Flaws Expose: We Butted Heads But Va. Advocate Deserved Help Not Warehousing!

Washington Post Photo

Washington Post Photo

A week ago, The Washington Post published a front-page story about Alison Hymes, a self-described psychiatric survivor, long-time Virginia mental health advocate and person living with mental illness.

Reporter Annys Shin’s story was headlined:

      SHE FOUGHT FOR PATIENTS’ RIGHTS, THEN HER’S WERE STRIPPED AWAY.

I met Ms. Hymes when we both were appointed to a task force appointed by the Chief Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court to draft new language for civil involuntary commitment criteria.

From the start, Ms. Hymes and I bumped heads.

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Powerful Readings From RESILIENCE, Angry Response To Fox Radio Host’s “Stupid” Statement

Moments before the show

Moments before the show

For those of you who missed it, Jessie Close, Glenn Close and I were on the Diane Rehm Show this morning (2-5-2015) talking about mental illness and our new book, RESILIENCE: Two Sisters and a Story of Mental Illness.  Here is a link to the program.

Highlights for me were hearing Glenn read one of the vignettes that she wrote for our book and also listening to Jessie read the first two pages of the book’s Prologue where she describes a screaming voice inside her head urging her to end her life. Their readings truly captured the emotion and power of their written words.

A listener asked for our reaction to Fox News Radio Host Tom Sullivan’s recent claim  that Bipolar Disorder is “made up” and a “fad.” Click to continue…

Tune in Thursday to hear Jessie, Glenn and Me Discuss RESILIENCE and Mental Illness

 

DIANE REHM

DIANE REHM

Jessie Close, Glenn Close and I will be interviewed on The Diane Rehm Show on Thursday, February 5th, at 11 a.m. (EST.)

I’ve been on Diane’s National Public Radio show four times and she is simply top-notch. She understands the importance of discussing mental illnesses, how they impact the lives of millions and the tremendous need in our nation to improve our mental health care system.

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My Message to Utah Legislators: Treatment Makes More Financial Sense Than Incarceration!

 

Jamie Justice, NAMI-Utah Director; Jackie Rendo, activist; Pete; Francisca Blanc, NAMI Development Director; Azra Juillerat, past NAMI Utah President.

Jamie Justice, NAMI-Utah Director; Jackie Rendo, activist; Pete; Francisca Blanc, NAMI Development Director; Zara Juillerat, past NAMI Utah President.

2-2-15 Members of the Utah House appropriations committee were studying their computer screens and not making eye contact with me until I mentioned that I had encountered three persons the day before outside the gates of the Mormon Temple grounds in Salt Lake City who were panhandling.

“Do you know how much NOT  helping those three is costing you?” I asked during my hurried seven minutes of testimony.

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