Improper Contact? Investigator Reveals His Boss Had Private Conversations About Creigh Deeds Case With Mental Health Official During Probe

Who-me

A top state official whose department was under investigation had contact with the Virginia Inspector General’s office while it was looking into the Creigh Deeds’ tragedy, according to an article published yesterday in The Daily Progress in Charlottesville.

Virginia Secretary of Health and Human Resources Bill Hazel acknowledged that he called state Inspector General Michael F.A. Morehart to discuss the case while Morehart’s office was conducting its probe. Both men said there was nothing improper about their conversations.

Inspector Generals are independent fact finders and are not supposed to be influenced by state officials, especially when they are conducting probes of their departments.

G. Douglas Bevelacqua, the IG investigator who was conducting the investigation, revealed the two men’s behind-the -scenes conversations. He said  Hazel referred to him as a  “loose cannon” in a call to his boss.

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Who’s To Blame in Virginia For The Deeds Tragedy? Apparently No One!

no-excuses

Accountability matters.

A jet crashes. People die. A whistleblower reveals that airline officials were warned two years earlier about a fatal flaw in the engine that caused the crash but executives ignored those warnings.

How would the public react?

The Virginia Office of Inspector General issued a damning report in 2012 about “streeting” — emergency rooms turning away patients because there were no psychiatric beds available even though the patients were in the midst of a mental crisis.  The author of that report, G. Douglas Bevelacqua, warned the state’s Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services that Virginia had a bed shortage problem that needed to be fixed.

No one listened.

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Virginia IG Report About Deeds Tragedy: Breaking News

deedscut

I’ve just obtained a copy of the Virginia Inspector General Report investigating the Virginia State Senator Creigh Deeds’ tragedy. You might recall that Inspector General Douglas Bevelacqua resigned after claiming that this investigative report was being watered down by his bosses. You can read the report by clicking here.

 

 

Rep. Murphy Investigates Psychiatric Bed Shortage

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Representative Tim Murphy, the only psychologist in the U.S. Congress, is continuing to keep pressure on the federal government to improve our mental health care system. This Wednesday, March 26th, the subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the House Energy and Commerce committee, that Rep. Murphy co-chairs will hold an investigative hearing about the nation’s lack of psychiatric hospital beds.

Beginning at 10 a.m. in Room 2123 of the Rayburn House Office Building, the hearing is entitled: “Where have all the patients gone? Examining the Psychiatric Bed Shortage.”

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In Your Worst Moments, Cling To The Best Times

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These past few months have been difficult.

I lost my mother in December to a fast acting cancer. She was 94 and died at home. I could not save her.

Her death caused my father’s dementia to become much, much worse. He is 93. It is heartbreaking watching him become more and more confused each day. I cannot save him.

Because of my mother’s age, people told me that she had lived a full life. They were trying to comfort me. Could you also argue that the longer you have someone, the tougher it is to let go?

These incidents have reminded me of my son’s first hospitalization. It happened on my birthday. Because he was ill, I was surprised when he handed me a home-made birthday card when I visited him at the hospital.  I described what happened next in my book,  CRAZY: A Father’s Search Through America’s Mental Health Madness.

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Arrested For Trespassing: Dies In Hot Cell, Another Senseless Jail Death

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A major focus of my work has been calling attention to individuals with mental illnesses who are locked in our jails and prisons. Jails should not be our new mental asylums and I am outraged that more than two million persons with mental health problems are booked into U.S jails each year. I also find it frustrating that many mental health advocates marginalize this problem. I have been told by advocates that persons with mental illnesses who get arrested deserve it. Yet, as I documented in my book and as this story from the Associated Press clearly shows, many inmates with mental illnesses are NOT criminals. They are persons whose major crime is that they got sick. It was their illness that led to them violating the law, not criminal intent.

 
Since I published my book, there has NOT been a decline in incarceration rates for persons with mental illnesses. That is why we must continue calling for an end to the jailing of people who need treatment and services such as housing, not incarceration and punishment. Otherwise, we will continue to see more stories like this one.
 

NEW YORK (AP) — Jerome Murdough was just looking for a warm place to sleep on a chilly night last month when he curled up in an enclosed stairwell on the roof of a Harlem public housing project where he was arrested for trespassing.

A week later, the mentally ill homeless man was found dead in a Rikers Island jail cell that four city officials say had overheated to at least 100 degrees, apparently because of malfunctioning equipment.

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