The following is a must read bc California is not the only state facing this problem. The
deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill during 60s resulted in thousands of mentally ill people being turned out into the streets. The original goal was loftycreate half-way houses to help reintegrate them back into society. Unfortunately, such a goal required money. Over time, jails and prisons have become
the new asylums. That, or you get incredibly tragic cases such as this.
The California Mental Health System and the Death of Mentally Ill Kelly Thomas
DJ Jaffe, Founder, Mental Illness Policy Org.
Huffington Post, 8/4/11 10:33 AM ET
In California, it is playing out with relentless familiarity: the death of Kelly Thomas at the hands of Fullerton police has led to the usual criticisms of the police and calls for better training and more compassion.
But Carla Jacobs, founder of the California Treatment Advocacy Coalition founder, and California's most astute mental illness advocate, notes in an interview that while police could always use better training in how to handle dangerous mentally ill individuals, the police are not always the villains: "When it comes to treating people with the most serious mental illnesses, the police will react where California's mental health system won't. Police are almost never out on a call regarding mental illness unless one condition is met: the mentally ill person has been abandoned by the mental health system. That's when they deteriorate, become psychotic, delusional and dangerous."
That happens too often. Ms. Jacobs remembers when mentally ill Edward Charles Allaway killed seven individuals on the Fullerton campus of California. "It was police who tracked him down." Ms. Jacobs' own sister-in-law was abandoned by the mental health system and shot her mother. Again: the police stepped in.
Full article:
click here
That said, imho, we, as a society, really do need to do more than *
just* apply the band-aid (
punishing the officers) to the symptom (
death of an untreated mentally ill individual). Sadly, there are a number of dynamics that play into these sorts of tragedies. And they involve everything from lack of appropriate training, to job-related stress, to instinctive flight/fight responses in the face of threatening behavior, to a sort of pack-like mentality. These ingredients together make for a volatile, and in this case, deadly situation.
This is not to say these men should not be punished. In fact, afaics, the full force of the law should come into play where they are concerned. But let's go further than punishment. Let's take a look at what we, as a society, can do to prevent these sorts of tragedies.