[Senate Hearing 108-372]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
S. Hrg. 108-372
AN EXAMINATION OF S. 1194, THE MENTALLY ILL OFFENDER TREATMENT AND
CRIME REDUCTION ACT OF 2003
=======================================================================
HEARING
before the
COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
UNITED STATES SENATE
ONE HUNDRED EIGHTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION
__________
JULY 30, 2003
__________
Serial No. J-108-32
__________
Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
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WASHINGTON : 2003
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COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
ORRIN G. HATCH, Utah, Chairman
CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, Iowa PATRICK J. LEAHY, Vermont
ARLEN SPECTER, Pennsylvania EDWARD M. KENNEDY, Massachusetts
JON KYL, Arizona JOSEPH R. BIDEN, Jr., Delaware
MIKE DeWINE, Ohio HERBERT KOHL, Wisconsin
JEFF SESSIONS, Alabama DIANNE FEINSTEIN, California
LINDSEY O. GRAHAM, South Carolina RUSSELL D. FEINGOLD, Wisconsin
LARRY E. CRAIG, Idaho CHARLES E. SCHUMER, New York
SAXBY CHAMBLISS, Georgia RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois
JOHN CORNYN, Texas JOHN EDWARDS, North Carolina
Bruce Artim, Chief Counsel and Staff Director
Bruce A. Cohen, Democratic Chief Counsel and Staff Director
C O N T E N T S
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STATEMENTS OF COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Page
DeWine, Hon. Mike, a U.S. Senator from the State of Ohio......... 1
Durbin, Hon. Richard J., a U.S. Senator from the State of
Illinois....................................................... 23
Grassley, Hon. Charles E., a U.S. Senator from the State of Iowa,
prepared statement............................................. 115
Hatch, Hon. Orrin G., a U.S. Senator from the State of Utah,
prepared statement............................................. 119
Leahy, Hon. Patrick J., a U.S. Senator from the State of Vermont. 3
prepared statement........................................... 130
WITNESSES
Atkins, Rhonda, Sarasota, Florida................................ 13
Campbell, Hon. John F., Member, Vermont State Senate, Quechee,
Vermont........................................................ 9
Eslinger, Donald F., Sheriff, Seminole County, Sanford, Florida.. 7
Honberg, Ron, Legal Director, National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill, on behalf of the Campaign for Mental Health Reform,
Arlington, Virginia............................................ 5
Stratton, Hon. Evelyn Lundberg, Justice, Supreme Court of Ohio,
Columbus, Ohio................................................. 15
Wilkinson, Reginald A., Director, Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction, on behalf of the Association of
State Correctional Administrators, Columbus, Ohio.............. 11
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Responses of Reggie Wilkinson to questions submitted by Senator
Durbin......................................................... 29
Responses of Evelyn Stratton to questions submitted by Senator
Durbin......................................................... 39
SUBMISSIONS FOR THE RECORD
American Psychological Association, Judge Maurice H. Richardson
(Ret.), Director, Massachusetts Mental Health Diversion
Program, Law and Psychiatry Program, University of
Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts,
statement...................................................... 63
Art for a Child's Safe America Foundation, Columbus, Ohio........ 69
Atkins, Rhonda, Sarasota, Florida, prepared statement............ 76
Campbell, Hon. John F., Member, Vermont State Senate, Quechee,
Vermont, prepared statement.................................... 80
Columbus Dispatch, Randy Ludlow, articles:
Critical Care, August 24, 2003............................... 84
Prison doctors aren't top shelf; some come with big problems,
August 24, 2003............................................ 91
Lives Lost and Damaged, August 25, 2003...................... 94
When co-pay plan started, clinic visits started falling,
August 25, 2003............................................ 101
Taft Focuses on Inmate Care; August 28, 2003................. 103
Panel To Review Health Care for Inmates, September 5, 2003... 106
Eslinger, Donald F., Sheriff, Seminole County, Sanford, Florida,
prepared statement............................................. 108
Honberg, Ron, Legal Director, National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill, on behalf of the Campaign for Mental Health Reform,
Arlington, Virginia, prepared statement........................ 121
Hogan, Michael F., Director, Ohio Department of Mental Health,
Chair, President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health,
Columbus, Ohio, statement and attachment....................... 132
Stratton, Hon. Evelyn Lundberg, Justice, Supreme Court of Ohio,
Columbus, Ohio, prepared statement............................. 145
Wilkinson, Reginald A., Director, Ohio Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction, on behalf of the Association of
State Correctional Administrators, Columbus, Ohio, prepared
statement...................................................... 153
Women, Girls & Criminal Justice, June/July 2002, article......... 163
AN EXAMINATION OF S. 1194, THE MENTALLY ILL OFFENDER TREATMENT AND
CRIME REDUCTION ACT OF 2003
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WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 2003
United States Senate,
Committee on the Judiciary,
Washington, D.C.
The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 2:08 p.m., in
room SD-226, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Mike DeWine
presiding.
Present: Senators DeWine, Leahy, and Durbin.
OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. MIKE DEWINE, A U.S. SENATORFROM THE
STATE OF OHIO
Senator DeWine. Welcome to the Judiciary Committee hearing
on Senate bill 1194, the Mentally Ill Offender Treatment and
Crime Reduction Act of 2003. Let me thank the Chairman of the
Judiciary Committee, Senator Hatch, for scheduling this
important hearing today, as well as cosponsoring this
legislation.
Let me also thank the Ranking Member of the Judiciary
Committee, Senator Leahy, for all of his hard work and for his
leadership in this area, and also for his cosponsorship of the
bill and for his hard work in preparing for our hearing today.
Let me also thank our original cosponsors, Senator Grassley,
Senator Domenici, and Senator Cantwell, for their efforts and
their hard work.
Those who suffer from mental illness face great challenges
in their lives, and when those with mental illness come into
contact with our criminal justice system, the challenges become
even greater. I learned this firsthand approximately 30 years
ago when I was a county prosecuting attorney in Greene County,
Ohio. I learned how important it is that our mental health
community and our law enforcement community work together to
deal with mentally ill offenders.
This kind of coordination is vital because people afflicted
with mental illness are incarcerated at significantly higher
rates than the general population. Specifically, approximately
5 percent of the American population has a mental illness, but
about 16 percent of the State prison population in this country
has such an illness. The Los Angeles County Jail, for example,
at any one time typically has more mentally ill inmates than
any hospital in the country.
Unfortunately, however, the reality of our criminal justice
system is that jails and prisons are not equipped to provide a
therapeutic environment for the mentally ill. In fact, mentally
ill inmates often become even sicker in jail. Once released
from jail or prison, many mentally ill people end up on the
streets. With limited resources and little or no ability to
handle their illness alone, they often commit additional
offenses, resulting in their re-arrest and re-incarceration.
This revolving door is costly and is disruptive for all
involved, worst of all for the person suffering from a mental
illness and his or her family.
Although these problems manifest themselves most clearly
within the prison system, the problem is also rooted in the
mental health system and its failure to provide sufficient
community-based treatment solutions. Accordingly, the key to
any solution of these problems will be collaboration--
collaboration between the mental health system and the criminal
justice system.
In fact, because many mentally ill offenders have a drug or
alcohol problem, in addition to their mental illness, solving
this problem also will require greater collaboration between
the substance abuse treatment and mental health treatment
communities. That, in a nutshell, is what our bill does.
The entire goal of the mentally ill offender treatment bill
is to foster exactly this type of collaboration at the Federal
level, the State level, and most particularly at the local
level. The bill provides funding for the criminal justice
system, for the juvenile system, and for the mental health and
substance abuse treatment systems all to work together at each
level of government to establish a network of services for
offenders with mental illness.
The bill would promote public safety by helping decrease
the number of repeat offenders, and also would promote public
health by ensuring that those with a serious mental illness are
treated as soon as possible and as efficiently and effectively
as possible.
The way this bill works is that it sets up a grant program,
establishing a pool of money which would be used to fund State
and local programs to address the problem of mentally ill
offenders. Most importantly, to ensure that these programs are
collaborative, the bill would require that two organizations,
such as sheriff's office and a mental health care agency, would
have to jointly submit a single grant application on behalf of
their community. So the bill would require that you would have
to have a mental health organization as well as a law
enforcement organization both applying together for the grant.
These funds could be used for a variety of purposes as long
as the program would further the goal of collaboration to help
the mentally ill. For example, grant funds may be used to
establish courts with specialized dockets for offenders who
have a serious mental illness or a co-occurring mental illness
and drug or alcohol problem.
Funds could be used also, for example, to enhance training
of mental health and criminal justice system personnel so that
they could better handle situations that might arise with a
mentally ill offender. Funds also could be devoted to programs
that would divert non-violent offenders into treatment instead
of prison, or correctional facilities could use grant funds to
promote the treatment of mentally ill inmates and ease their
transition back into the community upon release from jail or
prison.
Now, some of this may sound a little bit familiar to some
of you because this legislation does, in fact, build on
legislation that I introduced two years ago with my friend and
colleague from Ohio, Congressman Ted Strickland. That bill,
which many of my colleagues on this Committee joined with me in
working on, did, in fact, become law and it authorized the
establishment of more mental health courts.
I have long supported mental health courts, which enable
the criminal justice system to provide an individualized
treatment solution for a mentally ill offender, while also
requiring accountability of the offender. The legislation we
are discussing today builds on that law and would make possible
the creation or expansion of mental health courts. It also
would promote the funding of treatment services that support
such courts.
There are a number of other important provisions in our
legislation and we will discuss them today, but the real
essence of this bill is that it would provide the funding and
the incentive for law enforcement and mental health providers
to work together to provide real help to those who are
suffering from mental illness. The bill would help advance the
community interest in promoting public safety and the human
interest that we all have in helping people suffering from
mental illness.
Now, let me turn to my friend and my colleague on this
Committee, Senator Leahy.
STATEMENT OF HON. PATRICK J. LEAHY, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE
STATE OF VERMONT
Senator Leahy. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, and
before we even start I want to commend your longstanding and
well-demonstrated support of this concept. Like me, you have
had experience as a prosecutor. And, of course, you have seen
it from State government as lieutenant governor, so you know
how important it is. It is not something that we talk about out
of the abstract.
This is a good, bipartisan bill. There are far more
examples than not of legislation in this Congress that are put
together by members on both sides of the aisle, and not
surprisingly they are the ones that have the best chance of
being passed.
It is a good bill. It is going to help State and local
governments with a problem that sometimes is overlooked--the
extent to which mentally ill individuals commit crimes and then
they are sent out again without ever receiving appropriate
attention from the mental health, law enforcement, or
correction systems, and commit crimes again.
I welcome all the witnesses today, and I hope none of you
among the witnesses will feel at all slighted if I give a
special welcome to my fellow Vermonter, Senator John Campbell,
who is here. He is going to testify about how our State has
worked on this.
Senator Campbell is the majority leader of our Vermont
Senate. He is a member of the Judiciary Committee. He is a
former law enforcement officer. But even more importantly, of
the things that we share--we are both Vermonters, both been in
law enforcement--we both married nurses and that is the best
part of our lives. In his work as a legislator, as a lawyer,
and as a law enforcement officer, he has seen this issue from
policy perspectives, but also right up close and personal, as
so many of you have.
Too often, people with mental illness rotate repeatedly;
they go back and forth between the criminal justice system and
the streets of our communities. They go back on the streets and
they commit a number of crimes. Yet, we have fewer law
enforcement officers available to deal with this. They are
being occupied by very important things, very urgent things,
but they get diverted many times by lesser offenders.
Then these offenders find themselves in jails or elsewhere,
where there is no attempt made to take care of the mental
illness problems they have. So what we are trying to do is give
the State and local governments a tool to break the cycle. If
we do, it helps law enforcement, it helps corrections officers,
it helps the safety of all of us, but it also helps those who
are mentally ill. It really is a win-win-win-win.
When I held a Judiciary hearing last June, we heard from
the members of the criminal justice system. We heard from State
mental health officials, law enforcement officers, corrections
officials, and representatives of counties around our Nation,
and they all agreed that people with untreated mental illness
are more likely to commit crimes and that our State mental
health systems, prisons and jails don't have the resources they
need to treat the mentally ill and prevent recidivism.
We know that more than 16 percent of adults in U.S. jails
and prisons have a mental illness, that about 20 percent of the
youth in our juvenile justice system have serious mental health
problems, and that up to 40 percent of adults who suffer from a
serious mental illness are going to come in contact with the
American criminal justice system at some point in their lives.
We know all these things, but we have done very little to help
at the Federal level. This bill could change all that.
It is not a one-size-fits-all approach. It gives grantees
the ability to use the funds authorized under the bill for
mental health courts or other court-based programs, for
training mental health system personnel for mental health
treatment. It makes a real difference in funding--$100 million
authorized each year for the next two years. Actually spending
this money could save a great deal of money in the long run.
I am glad--and, Mr. Chairman, you have seen this from all
the people you have talked with, as I have--that it brings the
mental health experts together with law enforcement, something
where they both see a chance to win. So I applaud you for
holding the hearing, and I am hoping this is something that we
can get out and get passed.
[The prepared statement of Senator Leahy appears as a
submission for the record.]
Senator DeWine. Senator Leahy, thank you very much.
Let me introduce the panel very briefly.
Mr. Ron Honberg is the National Director of Policy and
Legal Affairs for NAMI, the National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill. He has worked extensively to promote diversion programs
and improve treatment for people with mental illness.
Sheriff Donald Eslinger is the Sheriff of Seminole County,
Florida. He has worked in the Seminole County Sheriff's Office
for the past 25 years. For 12 of those years, he has served as
the sheriff. Additionally, the sheriff has worked with
Florida's Behavioral Health Services Integration Work Group.
Senator John Campbell is the majority leader in the Vermont
Legislature. In addition to his work in the Vermont
Legislature, he is a former law enforcement officer and has
been practicing law for the past 20 years.
Dr. Reggie Wilkinson is the Director of the Ohio Department
of Rehabilitation and Correction, and has been with the
Department since 1973. He was first appointed Director in 1991
by then-Governor George Voinovich. He was reappointed eight
years later by current Government Robert Taft. The Department
oversees more than 30 prisons and is responsible for 45,000
inmates.
Rhonda Atkins is from Sarasota, Florida. She has firsthand
experience as a mother of a mentally ill child. Her daughter
got involved in a criminal justice system that was inadequately
prepared to offer her the services that she needed.
Justice Evelyn Stratton, of the Ohio Supreme Court, chairs
the Supreme Court Advisory Committee on the Mentally Ill in the
Courts in Ohio. This committee has been instrumental in
providing training for law enforcement officers to better
handle mentally ill offenders in the justice system.
Mr. Honberg, you will be the first witness. Let me say that
we will set the clock at five minutes for each one of you. We
have your written testimony, which we appreciate and will be
made a part of the record. When you see the yellow light, that
means you are down for a minute. We would like for you to
conclude your comments then, and that will enable us to have
some time, we hope, for some questions.
You may begin.
STATEMENT OF RON HONBERG, LEGAL DIRECTOR, NATIONAL ALLIANCE FOR
THE MENTALLY ILL, ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA, ON BEHALF OF THE
CAMPAIGN FOR MENTAL HEALTH REFORM
Mr. Honberg. Thank you. Senator DeWine, Senator Leahy, I am
deeply honored to have this opportunity to testify at this very
important hearing. My name is Ron Honberg and I am the Legal
Director for NAMI, the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill.
But I am also here testifying today on behalf of the Campaign
for Mental Health Reform, which is a collaboration among 15
leading national mental health organizations, including
consumers, family members, providers, and other advocates.
The recent report that was released by President Bush's new
Freedom Commission on Mental Health emphasizes what certainly
the two of you know so well that our Nation's jails and prisons
have become de facto psychiatric treatment facilities. Having
been in many of those facilities myself, I know that they are
not treatment facilities at all, that they are environments
that are not at all conducive to treating people who are
experiencing severe psychiatric symptoms.
Sheriffs and police officers throughout the country, as I
am sure you will hear today, will tell you that they frequently
respond to people who are experiencing psychiatric crises. In
view of this, the impressive line-up at this hearing, present
witness excluded, reflects the reality that the criminal
justice community has become the strongest ally of the mental
health field, and in some cases, frankly, the leaders behind
efforts to promote better mental health treatment and programs
to reduce unnecessary criminalization of people with mental
illnesses.
The landmark Criminal Justice/Mental Health Consensus
Project, which was convened by the Council of State
Governments, is an illustration of just how important these
issues have become. While compassion for a particularly
vulnerable segment of our society is certainly evident in these
efforts, the significant involvement of the criminal justice
community reflects something more--recognition that reducing
involvement of people with mental illnesses with criminal
justice systems benefits not only those individuals themselves,
but the criminal justice systems and society as a whole.
Most people with mental illnesses who come into contact
with law enforcement or criminal justice are not violent
criminals. Most would never have ended up in these systems at
all if they had received appropriate treatment in the first
place.
Yet, mental illness is the leading cause of disability in
the world, but fewer than half of all people with these
illnesses have access to even minimally adequate treatment and
services. I want to emphasize that with treatment, recovery is
very, very possible, but without treatment, the consequences
are frequently horrendous.
It is frankly unfair and very poor public policy to saddle
criminal justice systems with responsibility for responding to
people with mental illnesses in crisis, but that is the reality
in America today. As I said, police officers around the country
spend many hours transporting people to hospitals, and sit for
hours in emergency rooms, only to see the same people back out
again on the streets in a matter of a few hours. The time these
officers spend in doing so is time they are unable to spend
fighting crime.
In 2000, this Committee demonstrated its commitment by
enacting America's Law Enforcement and Mental Health Project,
as Senator DeWine said, a bill that authorized funding for
mental health courts, and this bill indeed represents the next
logical step forward.
Senator DeWine and Senator Leahy, we applaud you for
scheduling a hearing to tackle these troubling problems.
Senator DeWine, we are deeply grateful for your introduction of
the legislation and, Senator Leahy, for your cosponsorship,
that provides an important approach to badly needed community
reform.
This legislation wisely recognizes that solutions will
ultimately be found in communities, and what the Federal
Government can do and what good legislation must do is provide
support for a wide range of collaborative community programs
that provide avenues for effective and appropriate treatment.
I would like to use the remaining few minutes to make the
following five points.
First, it is critically important that collaboration occur
among all elements of the criminal justice and mental health
systems if efforts to reduce criminalization of people with
mental illnesses are to succeed. And I might add that this
collaboration is also necessary at the Federal level between
the Department of Justice, the Department of Health and Human
Services, and other key Federal agencies.
Second, jail diversion and community reentry programs will
succeed only when mental health services and supports are
available to address the needs of individuals in these
programs. A more thorough explanation of the types of services
needed is contained in my written testimony.
Third, the best form of jail diversion is that which occurs
prior to arrest and incarceration. For example, different
approaches to pre-booking diversion have emerged, such as the
nationally-renowned Memphis, Tennessee, Police Crisis
Intervention Team program, which has now been replicated, I am
very pleased to say, in over 50 communities across the country.
Fourth, a wide range of post-booking diversion strategies
exist, tailored to local needs and systems. Most notable, of
course, among these are mental health courts, which NAMI is
very pleased to report have been now adopted in approximately
70 communities across the country, many in Ohio, several in
Vermont. But there are other successful models, as well.
Finally, discharge planning and reentry services for
individuals with mental illnesses reentering the community are
critically important. Successful reintegration is frequently
hampered by lack of services and the failure to restore
benefits lost or suspended during incarceration. The Campaign
applauds the sponsors of S. 1194 for recognizing this and
ensuring that grant funds can be used to support vital
community reentry services.
Once again, I thank you and am very grateful that I have
had this opportunity to testify. I look forward to any
questions you might have.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Honberg appears as a
submission for the record.]
Senator DeWine. Thank you very much.
Sheriff?
STATEMENT OF DONALD F. ESLINGER, SHERIFF, SEMINOLE, COUNTY,
FLORIDA, SANFORD, FLORIDA
Sheriff Eslinger. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I, too, would
like to congratulate you and commend you on your leadership
concerning this very important piece of legislation.
Senator Leahy, thank you very much for your leadership as
well.
I am the Sheriff of Seminole County, and based on my
experience I can assure you that the provisions contained in
this bill are clearly needed to stem the ever-growing tide of
the mentally ill within the criminal justice system.
Ironically, it was five years ago this month that Seminole
County lost Deputy Sheriff Eugene Gregory in a tragic incident
that is emblematic of the crisis of untreated mental illness.
Deputy Gregory, responding to a disturbance call, ended up in a
confrontation with Alan Singletary, a man whose schizophrenia
went untreated for years, despite his family's efforts to get
him to accept treatment. Alan killed Deputy Gregory, wounded
two other deputies, and himself was killed in the ensuing 13-
hour standoff.
It was that tragedy that made me recognize the inescapable
conclusion that we have to shift the focus of intervention for
people with untreated mental illness away from law enforcement
and the criminal justice system back to professionals who are
trained to provide care and treatment for individuals with
severe mental illness.
The Senate bill provides critically needed resources for
alternatives to incarceration, including training of law
enforcement officers and mental health providers, and fostering
collaboration among community stakeholders.
With these resources, we have a greater hope of
accomplishing really three main goals: number one, preventing
fatal encounters involving law enforcement officers and those
who are suffering from mental illness, as well as preventing
unnecessary injuries that often occur during these crisis
situations; number two, responding to the intense fiscal
pressures in our counties throughout America, as well as making
better use of public safety resources by not just treating
symptoms of the problem, but looking at the underlying
causation and addressing it.
The loss of Deputy Gregory and Alan Singletary were far
from an isolated incident and is not unique to Florida. Just
since that tragedy in July of 1998, at least 175 other people
with mental illness and 28 law enforcement officers have been
killed in altercations across this Nation, 6 in D.C. and
Maryland alone. This month, five mentally ill people have been
killed in encounters with law enforcement. We now know that
mental illness is a factor in many police shootings. In fact,
people with mental illnesses are four times more likely to be
killed in these encounters than the general population.
It is critical to train officers to deescalate crisis
situations. Seminole County has fully implemented the Memphis
Model for CIT, a proven approach that fosters partnerships
between law enforcement and the community. CIT has been shown
to reduce officer injury rates five-fold.
Equally as important is to prevent these incidents from
ever occurring, because even the best training is no substitute
for having medical professionals handle medical crises. The
most effective way to prevent these violent episodes and deadly
encounters is to prevent them by providing earlier intervention
and treatment. This is not only the safest approach, but it is
the most cost-effective.
Lack of treatment impacts county budgets significantly in
costs of personnel, incarceration, treatment within the system,
emergency care, and even lawsuits. I am aware of at least seven
lawsuits stemming from police shootings filed or settled since
April of this year, some in excess of $1 million.
When there are no alternatives to incarceration, the
mentally ill begin to swell inmate populations in local jails
and prisons.
Mr. Chairman, as you alluded to, we now have over 300,000
incarcerated mentally ill in county and State prisons
throughout this country, nearly six times the number in State
psychiatric hospitals. These individuals are ill and most don't
belong in jail.
I will abridge my comments, Mr. Chairman, for the sake of
moving on. I would be delighted to answer any questions, but I
must say again, to reiterate what you had conveyed, fostering
community collaboration is a vital component of this bill. The
deaths of Deputy Gregory and Alan Singletary inspired our
community to collaborate to prevent such tragedies and improve
the lives of people with severe mental illness. It is my hope
that Senate bill 1194 will be a part of Gene and Alan's legacy,
making certain that people with mental illness get treatment
before tragedy.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Sheriff Eslinger appears as a
submission for the record.]
Senator DeWine. Sheriff, thank you very much.
Senator Campbell.
STATEMENT OF HON. JOHN F. CAMPBELL, MEMBER, VERMONT STATE
SENATE, QUECHEE, VERMONT
Mr. Campbell. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Let's make sure we
get this on.
Senator DeWine. You have to have those really close, is
what we have learned here.
Mr. Campbell. My children will like that, also.
Senator Leahy. What happened, John, is we had too many
snippets on the evening news with open mikes, everything from
planning golf games to sometimes a little bit stronger. So we
are being a little more careful around here.
Mr. Campbell. Well, Don and I were planning our golf game
before, but we will hold off until after the hearing.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman, Senator Leahy. My name is
John Campbell. I am a member of the Vermont State Senate, where
I serve as the majority leader, and also serve on the Judiciary
and the Appropriations Committee.
First, I would like to thank you for inviting me here today
to speak in support of S. 1194, the Mentally Offender Treatment
and Crime Reduction Act of 2003. As a former law enforcement
officer and attorney for over 20 years and a current State
legislator, I believe I have a unique perspective on the issues
that we are discussing here today.
During my time as a police officer, I frequently found
myself called to scenes involving petty thefts, disturbances,
and public intoxication. It was not uncommon to find the
suspects of these crimes to be acting paranoid or behaving
erratically.
While I was quite able to handle the criminal aspect of the
situation, I was not trained to deal with the complex
underlying issues of mental illness and substance abuse.
Although there were times that it was necessary to arrest and
incarcerate certain individuals with mental illnesses in order
to protect the public, others who had committed low-level
crimes, non-violent, as a result of their mental illness should
have been referred to a mental health agency. Unfortunately,
such care was rarely available, which left us with no other
option other than to transport them to the county jail, not a
fine place for someone who is suffering from mental illness.
Police officers today are better trained to recognize and
deal with these situations. However, they still find the
process of securing diagnosis and treatment extremely
frustrating. They find that the treatment providers may refuse
to accept an individual for several reasons--lack of health
care coverage, acuity of the illness, denying responsibility
for the treatment of that person's specific diagnosis.
In cases where an individual is eligible for services, the
officer may find themselves waiting hours before that person is
admitted. In other cases, the person is admitted for treatment,
but often discharged shortly thereafter, and sometimes is back
on the street before the police officer even makes it back to
finish his report.
Requiring police officers to act as quasi-mental health
care providers places an unreasonable burden on them, the
department, and their communities. The time required to
facilitate treatment for individuals keeps the officers from
performing their normal patrol functions and forces departments
to either hire additional personnel or expose the community to
a lack of police coverage. This is especially troublesome in
rural communities, such as Vermont, as reduced police presence
there sometimes means the difference between having one officer
and having none at all.
While the initial responsibility for finding placement for
these individuals often falls upon law enforcement, a burden
felt by the communities, the ones who really suffer, the ones
who truly suffer are those who are afflicted, and also their
families. They simply have no place to go.
This disjoined spectrum of responsibility is never more
evident than when dealing with co-occurrence disorder.
Individuals who suffer from co-occurrence find themselves the
proverbial hot potato, tossed among the mental health agencies,
substance abuse facilities, and the criminal justice system.
These agencies and organizations have good intentions. All
of them seek to break that cycle. However, unless there is a
collaborative effort, it is inevitable that the individual will
find themselves interacting with the criminal justice system.
The systemic dysfunction is not isolated to any one area.
From large urban areas to small communities such as my own in
Quechee, Vermont, people are in dire need of integrated
services. I often represent families in crisis, and in the
majority of these cases you will find an underlying mental
health problem.
It is extremely frustrating to search for a solution for
these families. Too often, we come up short as a result of
fragmented and insufficient resources to deal with the issues.
It is devastating to watch families implode over issues that,
if treated, could be managed. Mothers and fathers have to stand
by as their children self-medicate themselves with alcohol and
drugs in order to escape the personal horrors of their mental
illness.
Passage of S. 1194 will promote the types of integrated
treatment and collaborative efforts between the criminal
justice system and the mental health organizations that could
spare many of these families those agonies.
As an elected official, I appreciate more than ever the
fiscal implications of the existing problem. Having to provide
mental health treatment in an incarcerated setting is neither
cost-effective nor clinically sound. A community-based approach
would provide more complex services at a far greater service to
the taxpayers.
Many States have implemented programs for just these
reasons. Vermont is one of them. One of our more effective
programs is taking place in two of our largest communities,
Burlington and Brattleboro. It is called the Co-Occurring
Disorders Treatment Project, which promotes public safety and
health by offering comprehensive, integrated mental health and
substance abuse services to those individuals with both
psychiatric and substance abuse disorders and who have ongoing
involvement in the criminal justice system.
Quite simply, as everyone has said so far, we can't do this
without you. There is no way that we are going to bring
collaborative services to our communities without your help,
and therefore I would ask that anything we can do to help you
support and pass S. 1194.
If there are any questions, I would be more than happy to
answer them later.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Campbell appears as a
submission for the record.]
Senator DeWine. Senator, thank you very much.
Director Wilkinson.
STATEMENT OF REGINALD A. WILKINSON, DIRECTOR, OHIO DEPARTMENT
OF REHABILITATION AND CORRECTION, COLUMBUS, OHIO, ON BEHALF OF
THE ASSOCIATION OF STATE CORRECTIONAL ADMINISTRATORS
Mr. Wilkinson. Good afternoon. Thank you, Senator DeWine,
Chairman Hatch, and Ranking Member Leahy, for inviting me to
testify regarding Senate bill 1194. My name is Reggie Wilkinson
and I am the Director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction. ODRC comprises more than 30 prisons and on any
given day our agency supervises 45,000 prisoners housed in our
correctional institutions. Moreover, we supervise another
30,000 persons on parole and probation.
Today, I not only represent the great State of Ohio that is
so ably represented by Senator DeWine, but also the Association
of State Correctional Administrators. ASCA is the national
organization that represents persons who serve in my position
in each of the 50 States and several other jurisdictions in
this country. I am the current president of ASCA.
I would also like to provide testimony on behalf of the
Council of State Governments. They recently undertook a major
initiative dealing with the mentally ill offender. Their work
culminated in the publishing of a landmark report entitled
``Criminal Justice/Mental Health Consensus Project.'' This
bipartisan initiative brought together 100 leading law
enforcement and mental health officials in the United States.
A brief history. In 1993, following a prison riot at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility where one correctional
officer and nine inmates were killed, a Federal lawsuit was
filed in Ohio entitled Dunn v. Voinovich, challenging the
constitutionality of Ohio's mental health delivery system in
our prisons.
We agreed, however, to a five-year consent decree in 1995
and decided to concentrate on, with the oversight of the
Federal court, improving our mental health services for the
mentally ill prisoner. Throughout the life of this lawsuit--the
case was terminated per the settlement in the year 2000--all
parties, including the plaintiff's counsel, the court monitor,
State's attorneys, correctional administrators, and health care
administrators, agreed to manage points of contention
privately.
Consequently, I am extremely proud of the mental health
delivery system that currently exists in the State of Ohio. I
consider the current system to be a national benchmark as it
relates to prison mental health care. However, I know that it
is very difficult, with the budget constraints, that we
continue along the current path that I am so proud of today.
I think this legislation, Senate bill 1194, can be the
single most important positive legislative development for
correction and mental health workers to occur in Congress in
recent memory. It is gratifying to see a group of leaders in
the Senate rally as they have under Senator DeWine's and
others' leadership around a bill that practitioners and
policymakers alike will agree can save lives, increase public
safety, and reduce State and local government spending.
First, save lives. Our Nation's prisons, where more than
1.3 million persons are incarcerated on any given day, and our
jails, which book about 10 million people annually, house more
people with mental illness than do our country's mental health
institutions. In fact, I often claim that correctional
administrators are de facto mental health directors. That is
enormously frustrating for us in the corrections community. Our
principal job is to incapacitate and rehabilitate persons who
are dangerous to the community, not to hospitalize sick people.
Although we believe criminals with a mental illness should
be punished, we also know that a correctional environment is
hardly conducive to recovery for a person with mental health
problems, especially a seriously mentally ill person or a
person with an Axis 1 diagnosis. Not surprisingly, inmates with
untreated mental illness are at a high risk of committing
suicide or being victimized by predatory inmates.
Public safety. The growing involvement of persons with
mental illness in the criminal justice system has enormous
public safety implications. Many offenders with mental illness
have committed a crime that makes their incarceration necessary
and appropriate. Still, nearly all inmates with a mental
illness will be released from prison at some point.
Unless we provide these offenders with the services and
treatment they need while they are incarcerated, we are
virtually guaranteeing that they will commit new crimes when
they return to the community. Nevertheless, few corrections
systems are able to prepare inmates for adequate release
following their incarceration. Not surprisingly, studies have
shown that rates of recidivism for persons with a mental
illness should concern all elected officials.
Senate bill 1194 can promote effective reentry planning for
persons with a mental illness through efforts such as
encouraging mental health providers to come into correctional
facilities and connect with the offender prior to release and
ensuring inmates have an adequate supply of medication upon
their release. Typically, two weeks of psychotropic medication
is provided to offenders once they are released from our
custody.
Reduced spending. Nearly every State in the Nation now
knows that it is extremely expensive to manage persons with a
mental illness. We have found out in the corrections business
that we are no longer recession-proof, that we have enormous
responsibilities and great fiscal burdens. Speaking on behalf
of persons in my capacity, we are hoping that Senate bill 1194
will continue with its current path in due speed.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Wilkinson appears as a
submission for the record.]
Senator DeWine. Thank you very much.
Ms. Atkins.
STATEMENT OF RHONDA ATKINS, SARASOTA, FLORIDA
Ms. Atkins. Chairman DeWine, I am very grateful to be here
today in support of Senate bill 1194, the Mentally Ill Offender
Treatment and Crime Reduction Act of 2003.
My name is Rhonda Atkins. I am the mother of a 25-year-old
mentally ill daughter from Sarasota, Florida. My daughter would
have been spared a great deal of torment, as well as our entire
family, had these things been in place ten years ago.
My daughter suffers from a severe mental illness, bipolar
disorder, and for much of these last ten years she has cycled
in and out of psychiatric hospitals--rather, ping-ponged from
psychiatric hospitals to substance abuse treatment centers--
inconsistent treatment, and her condition has steadily grown
worse over the years. She is presently in treatment, after
struggling for literally most of these last ten years to have
her in long-term treatment.
I will never forget what it is like when she is not in
treatment. When she is not on her proper medication, she
becomes very symptomatic, with mania. Some of the symptoms of
that would be extreme irrationality, hyper speech to the point
where she can hardly be understood. She doesn't think the way
that you or I do when she is suffering from one of these
episodes.
She can become paranoid, thinking that those of us who are
trying to help her, who love her, who want to get assistance
for her, are trying to make her think that she is crazy, that
it is we who have the problem and she is fine. She becomes
delusional, very poor judgment, very dangerous to herself.
There have been many, many nights, countless nights when I
have not known where my beautiful daughter was, sometimes for a
night, sometimes for a week, up to three months at one time.
Like many people with mental illness, she sometimes doesn't
think that she is ill and doesn't want to take her medication.
She had not been consistently in treatment long enough to
really gain the insight to understand that she indeed is ill
and it would behoove her to stay in treatment or stay on
medication.
Like so many other people with mental illness, she has
tried to calm the chatter in her own mind with substance-
abusing, which only makes her symptoms worse and the situation
worse. She has often been uncontrollable and we have many times
been afraid of what she would do to herself. She has indeed
tried to harm herself on numerous occasions by wrist-cutting,
overdosing, and things like that.
When someone gets that sick and when the mental health
system doesn't respond, usually the first line of recourse is
the police. There have been numerous times when we have had to
have police officers come to our home. Some have been educated
enough to know how to deescalate a situation.
There were others. I will never forget the one who very
roughly handled her and said that if you were my daughter, I
would knock you across the room. As you can imagine, that can
throw fire upon a very tense situation already and cause
problems that would not have been necessary, They might have
deescalated a situation and gotten her into a safe situation
had they been better trained to deal with a mentally ill
person.
The first time my daughter was arrested was for a
trespassing charge. Each time she brushed with the law, we
would hope that then would be the moment that we would get some
assistance that we needed to get her into treatment that we
knew she needed.
Sometimes, when we would get into a situation, there were
no services for her to be diverted to, or if there were
services, there were waiting lists for those services. Waiting
lists are just--when you need the treatment, you need it now.
Six months from now doesn't serve someone who desperately needs
to be in safe care in the moment.
She has been arrested on a drug charge, which isn't
surprising because when she is self-medicating, it will just
often lead to that. There was one occasion when she was
arrested on a drug charge and actually went through a drug
court, but even then there was no real understanding or
integration of services for substance abuse and mentally ill
offenders.
So rather than having an integrated approach to working
with my daughter, she was just in the drug treatment program.
Actually, a social worker in the program had discouraged her
from taking her medication, which was lithium, which resulted
in her deescalating, becoming manic again, and an a series of
hospitalizations occurred after that.
I believe in a 3-year period, there were, I think, 20, 21
hospitalizations, which is very costly to the State. My
statements to those in charge were it would be so much less
expensive if you treated this on the front end rather than the
repeated hospitalizations, the jail, all of those occurrences.
The very tragic thing about so much of this is that my
daughter is intelligent. She is a beautiful young woman, and
while many of her friends were starting careers, getting
married, having babies, my daughter spent years drifting
through the streets, in and out of the jail system and
emergency rooms, living among drug dealers.
Within the last three years, she was sleeping in cat feces.
She weighed 81 pounds at one point. Her body was covered with
sores, and still we couldn't get her in long-term care. This
bill could have saved years of my daughter's life. It could
have saved us a great deal of heartache and grief early on,
because this is an illness that doesn't affect just the person
who has the illness, but it affects the entire family.
The reality under current law is that law enforcement
officers often are the ones who are the first line of response
for people with mental illness. I am deeply in support of this
bill to encourage what is needed on every level of working with
those with mental illness in all levels of the system. Nothing
can be gained by putting a person on a waiting list.
My daughter has a brain disease, and these people need
help; they simply need help. I felt personally compelled to
come here today to plead with you to pass this bill. There are
many people suffering who will continue to suffer without its
passage. I am here to speak on behalf of all of us, all the
families across the State of Florida, where I am from, and
across the Nation who suffer from this illness. Please pass
this bill so that another mother won't have to watch her
daughter or her child deteriorate the way that my daughter has.
Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Ms. Atkins appears as a
submission for the record.]
Senator DeWine. Thank you very much.
Justice Stratton.
STATEMENT OF HON. EVELYN LUNDBERG STRATTON, JUSTICE, SUPREME
COURT OF OHIO, COLUMBUS, OHIO
Justice Stratton. Thank you very much, Senator Leahy and
Senator DeWine, for allowing me the privilege of coming and
sharing with you.
You have heard much today about the problems that have
brought us to this bill. I hope to share with you a little
different focus on why this bill can be successful and why this
bill can make a difference.
My own story that brought me here is that about eight years
ago I received a call from the governor's office appointing me
to the Ohio Supreme Court. As you can imagine, it was one of
the most exciting moments of my life. That same week, my 12-
year-old son ended up in a mental hospital seriously depressed
and suicidal, and I went from the biggest highs during the day
to the biggest lows at night, holding his hand, wondering if he
was going to live.
Then I went to court and sat on the bench and looked at the
defendants in front of me who had absolutely no mental health
care. If they were alcoholic and drug-addicted but had a mental
health problem, Drug and Alcohol wouldn't take them. If they
were mentally ill but had a felony, the mental health system
wouldn't take them. So I put them in jail, often more for their
protection than anything else.
I felt a compelling need to do something. So two years ago
I went to the chief and asked if I could establish a task
force. He said we have no money. I said I will do it on my own.
I called together some experts in the field and said I don't
know anything about this, but I want to make a difference, help
me.
We got people from Mental Health, from Drug and Alcohol,
from Sheriff's, from Probation, from NAMI, from the Ohio
Advocates for the Mentally Ill. We put together a statewide
task force and we started to try to find solutions. We have met
every month for two years now, and every meeting our goal is to
come forward with something positive, not a white paper, not a
study, but something to move forward to make a difference in
this State.
We have now over 20 counties that have either a mental
health court or some program specifically aimed at the mentally
ill in the jails. Every major city in Ohio now has a CIT
program. We have over 150 law enforcement officers that came to
the last NAMI convention, something totally unprecedented. We
are even now going to the campus police and offering training
for campus police.
Our goal is to get every single county to put together a
collaborative task force. I have a waiting list a mile long of
counties that want me to come, but I still have no staff, no
resources. I make all my site visits myself. My law clerks type
all my letters. We are doing it on our own, but we are still
making a difference because collaboration is what works.
I wish to give you an example of one county where it
worked. Some people came to me from Franklin County and said,
we have a serious problem. We have all these mentally ill. We
know you are doing something. Can you come and help us?
One of the advantages of my job is judges tend to return my
phone calls. So I called some judges, I called some local
people. We had ten people that met over a year-and-a-half ago,
tried to put a little group together, and discovered the
Department of Mental Health had funded a grant program for
Franklin County, for the jails. The judges had never heard of
it. We had 500 beds funded by the Community Shelter Board for
the Mentally Ill and Homeless. The judges had never heard of
it. We had a program that trained the mentally ill to work. The
judges had never heard of it.
That committee now has 55 people on it. It has started a
mental health program in the Franklin County muni court and a
drug court in the common pleas court. It has received two
grants. One is from your mental health bill that you passed
before. They are starting two CIT programs in the city of
Columbus, and that program not only deals with the mentally ill
in the jails, but they have started to find so many other ways
to collaborate and work together outside of the jail system and
not duplicate and waste resources. So it has been a tremendous
success just in one county alone.
A judge from Seneca County started this with the Juvenile
Court, trying to deal with the juveniles in his court. He got
together the schools, mental health, and drug and alcohol
folks, and got them to work on the problem in their county.
When he first met with them, they sat on opposite sides of the
room, wouldn't even talk to each other, Drug and Alcohol one
side, Mental Health on the other. By the fourth meeting, they
were intermingling.
They are currently now having an intervention program that
tries to identify kids before they even are declared a criminal
defendant, before they are even arrested, to intervene and work
with them. This program can further that type of collaboration.
It can provide that key seed money.
I have a staff attorney and she has a sister named Sheree.
Sheree had a drug and alcohol problem, a mental health problem,
and had been arrested several times. Last week, Sheree died of
a drug overdose. To others, she was a statistic; she was a
mentally ill, drug-addicted criminal defendant. But to us, she
was a sister, a mother, a daughter, a wife. She left four
children. She was 46. There was no mental health program in her
community.
We were too late to help Sheree and we may be too late to
help others, but we can really make a difference with this
bill, with the catalyst this funding can provide, to get that
collaboration going that can make such a difference.
Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Justice Stratton appears as a
submission for the record.]
Senator DeWine. Well, I want to thank all of our witnesses
for some very compelling testimony.
Let me turn now to Senator Leahy.
Senator Leahy. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I think this has
been a very good hearing. You know, there are a million things
going on right now on the Hill. The Senate is in session and we
are having votes and doing other things. That is why there are
so few here. There are, however, a number of staff members of
various Senators, key Senators on this on both sides of the
aisle, and I have a feeling that a synopsis of all your
testimony, the six of you, is going to be in the must-reading
book for a lot of Senators tonight.
Let me ask Senator Campbell this question, and I ask this
not to be parochial, but I think probably the same question can
be asked in any small State or any basically rural areas.
Can you give me examples of what Federal funding provided
under the Mentally Ill Offenders Treatment and Crime Reduction
Act that we are talking about--what funding under that would
allow a small State like Vermont to do that it wouldn't
otherwise be able to do?
Mr. Campbell. Senator, I think especially small States, but
even some of the ones that maybe are not as far advanced in
their State programs regarding mental illness--we are trying to
start with the mental health court. We now have a pilot program
for drug courts, and in coming up with the ideas for these
programs we are following the lead of a lot of other States.
It is wonderful to start the programs, but unless we have
the resources to actually treat the folks that are coming
through the programs, we are not going to be successful here.
Then we are just going to be again back here in a few years
talking about other programs and trying to get other grants.
I believe that with the Federal funds that this bill would
suggest, we would be able to make sure that the drug courts and
the mental health courts not only are implemented, but they are
sustained. That is really the key here, is the sustainability
of the programs. In addition to that, we need to make sure that
we have the resources available to have the collaborative
effect that you are seeking under this bill.
So with that, with the funds that are provided here, I
think we will be able to make a difference. Without them, I
don't see us fiscally being able to handle it in the State
budgets.
Senator Leahy. Are there other things we see in a rural
area? We have very small police departments. I suspect rural
Ohio and rural Illinois, or any other State represented here
also have very small police departments. Are these among the
biggest problems?
We have heard Ms. Atkins talk about a police officer
reacting to her daughter. We have heard the sheriff speak and
others speak about how you react when you go there. Is this an
insurmountable problem?
Mr. Campbell. I don't think it is, but I tell you the
training of police officers is so important. I can understand
Ms. Atkins's dismay over something like that, and as a former
law enforcement officer, I cringed when I heard that story.
Especially in rural areas like we have, as you know, the
State police do a wonderful job in Vermont. However, they are
spread very thin. We are right now down 40 to 45 officers.
Sometimes, in the rural areas, the only people we have actually
patrolling are the sheriff's department, which only has about
two or three people, and most of those are part-time folks, or
constables. The sheriff's department in Vermont--a lot of the
sheriffs, and also the constables, are not trained in these
areas specifically. So we have that problem to deal with.
In addition to that, we have an issue that when you are in
such a rural area, everything is so spread out that it is very
difficult to get the services and use the urban models that
seem to be effective here in those rural areas because of the
fact that there is not enough training.
So this bill, I believe, would effectively enable the
mental health communities, the corrections and the substance
abuse communities, to train the folks within these smaller
communities, train the police officers, and train the
constables to make sure that they are available to help in
crisis situations and to continue with the wrap-around
services, and also to make sure that it is not just a one-time
shot, that they follow them all the way through until there is
some type of recovery.
Senator Leahy. You have the obvious problem we have with
juveniles; they get out and nobody does follow-up. I know it is
one of the things that both Senator DeWine and I have talked
about, and I would hope that this would allow us to do
something in that kind of a follow-up.
Mr. Campbell. If I may read, this is from the Juvenile
Justice Commission report of February 2003. I couldn't sum it
up better, but this kind of lets us know about how our juvenile
justice is in Vermont.
``Vermont's juvenile and youth justice response represents
a fragmented array of programs and interventions. There is no
clearly defined, consistent, or coordinated statewide response
for juveniles and young offenders, nor are efforts woven into a
large continuum of care for children and families. The State
Agency of Health Services, working in partnership with the
judiciary, communities, and families, need to bring these
efforts together and create an integrated and coordinated
system of care.''
That sums it up right there, and we can have wonderful
programs, but unless it is a collaborative and integrated
affair, then we are not going to be successful.
Senator Leahy. Well, you know, I couldn't agree with you
more from my own experience, and certainly from the things that
you have done and others have done in Vermont on this, but also
from some of the other testimony Senator DeWine and I have
heard.
I would like to ask Dr. Wilkinson, what about law
enforcement and corrections officers and mental health
problems? I mean, you come from a much larger State than
Senator Campbell and I do. Are they willing to work together? I
am talking about law enforcement and corrections and mental
health. Are there obstacles to coordinating? Are there things
that could be done better? What is your general take on that?
Mr. Wilkinson. I think the obstacle that exists more so
than anything else has been the fact that people have not
brought folks together that need to be in the same room, like
Justice Stratton is currently doing. I think that is the first
thing, and a lot of the problems that we can solve can be
solved without a whole lot of money, which brings us to the
second problem.
Sometimes, money can't be avoided when we are talking about
the need to get persons who appear to be acting out, and
sometimes that behavior is criminal and sometimes it is deviant
behavior as a result of a psychosis, for example. If there are
not crisis centers for police to refer persons to, if there is
no crisis intervention training and first responders can't
adequately identify unusual behavior that might be a mental
illness, then those persons are going to travel through the
criminal justice system and cause taxpayers of all of our
jurisdictions to spend multi-million dollars on something that
could have been avoided at the very beginning of this process.
Senator Leahy. To say nothing about the risk to others,
themselves, and everybody within the system.
Mr. Wilkinson. That is exactly right, and it is very
expensive once they are in the system. The cost of housing a
person who is mentally ill is extremely more costly than it is
to house a person without a mental illness. You take the
statistic that Senator DeWine mentioned. About 16 percent of
all the persons in prison have a mental illness, and half of
them have an Axis 1 serious mental illness. We are talking
about an awful lot of money.
But on your original question of do we work together, the
answer is unequivocally, absolutely yes, and it is happening.
But part of the problem that relates to that is that we don't
tell those stories well enough. So I think part of the bill
addresses that we not only need to give grant money to
jurisdictions who apply for it; we need to dissect what is
going on and share that with other jurisdictions across this
country.
Senator Leahy. Thank you. Well, I think what Judge Stratton
has said, as you have mentioned, is important there.
Mr. Chairman, I will put my other questions in the record.
I just might say, Ms. Atkins, obviously all of us who are
parents up here feel for what you are going through and hope
that someday the best solution will come of that.
Sheriff, there is no way to bring back Deputy Gregory, but
all of us, again, on this Committee share your sadness at his
death.
Thank you all for taking the time. It is not easy to work
out time for people to come to testify and I appreciate it.
Ms. Atkins, do you want to say something?
Ms. Atkins. I just wanted to say that it is wonderful to be
at a table in a group with a cooperative spirit of everyone
working together, because as my daughter shuffled through the
system it has been so fragmented and to have everyone working
together is just what I have prayed for for ten years.
Senator Leahy. Thank you.
Senator DeWine. Ms. Atkins, we just appreciate your
testimony very much and the fact that you would come and share
your story with us. I take it that your daughter is doing
better today?
Ms. Atkins. She is doing better today. She was in
residential treatment for a year and she is in a therapeutic
community presently, still in treatment, but a step down from
where she has been. And I can honestly tell you that a year-
and-a-half ago, no one thought she would be alive today.
Because she has been in treatment, we have hope that she is
going to continue with her recovery. She is doing better
presently than she has in the last ten years.
Senator DeWine. Good. Well, we wish her well and we wish
you well.
Ms. Atkins. Thank you.
Senator DeWine. Sheriff, you gave in your written testimony
some very alarming statistics and pointed out something, I
think, that we should know and maybe we don't think enough
about, and that is how very dangerous it is for the police
officer and how dangerous it is for the defendant, the
criminal, when that criminal has a mental problem.
You pointed out how many people just in the last month have
been killed when that person had a mental problem. I mean, the
sheriff or the deputy or the police officer goes in and tries
to make an arrest. If that person whom he is arresting has a
mental problem, that is a high-risk proposition for both of
them.
I guess it just points out maybe the need for this bill,
but also points out the need for training. Ms. Atkins gave some
testimony that would indicate sometimes maybe we don't have
enough training for those officers. I got a letter after I
introduced this bill, a copy of a letter that was sent to some
of my colleagues from another State from, again, a mother who
had some similar experiences that Ms. Atkins had relating about
her child, her experiences with officers.
I think we are doing a better job today than we were
probably when I was a county prosecutor 30 years ago. But how
well are we doing? How often do we have these crisis
intervention teams? How many jurisdictions have crisis
intervention teams? Could you just kind of reflect on that for
us?
Sheriff Eslinger. I do believe that law enforcement
administrators throughout this country recognize that the
mental health issue is not just a humanitarian issue or a
public health issue, but it is also a public safety issue as
well. I believe that a lot of agencies--and NAMI can back us--
have moved to CIT and much more can be done in the area of
training.
But what the bill also does, Mr. Chairman, is to provide
earlier intervention. Law enforcement is called upon only
during a crisis situation and we need to shift the focus of
that intervention back to the mental health professionals.
In the State of Florida, law enforcement conducts 34
percent more Baker Acts, which is our involuntary examination,
than DUI arrests. We average over 115 a day of Florida's Baker
Act law. That is more than aggravated assault, that is more
than burglary arrests that we make, and we need to shift the
burden back.
In fact, in half the counties in the State of Florida,
nearly half of the counties, no mental health professional is
involved in administering the Baker Act; it is law enforcement.
What your bill will do is not only develop that collaboration,
but it will also shift focus back to the mental health
professional and provide greater assistance in community-based
treatment.
Senator Durbin. But it is a safety issue, and it is a
safety issue for the officer, it is a safety issue for the
person they are going to arrest, and maybe a safety issue for
innocent bystanders as well.
Sheriff Eslinger. As I mentioned earlier, Mr. Chairman,
those who suffer from mental illness are four times more likely
to be involved in a fatal police shooting.
Senator DeWine. A staggering statistic.
I am going to have to move on. Let me ask Mr. Honberg and
anybody else who wants to comment on what our experience has
been with the mental health courts. They are of fairly recent
origin. They are certainly of recent origin on the Federal
level, but before our bill was enacted there were some mental
health courts at the State level that had already been started.
Ours didn't start it. We were trying to add to that and put
kind of the Federal seal of approval on them, and we were glad
to be able to do that.
What has been the experience at the local level?
Mr. Honberg. Well, you know, they are a relatively new
phenomenon.
Senator DeWine. Yes, they are. That is why I asked.
Mr. Honberg. Yes, despite the fact that there are over 70,
so they have certainly devolved like wildfire around the
country. So, you know, in terms of formal data, it is just
starting to come out.
I think based on what we have heard today, first of all,
the first point I would make is that it is pretty obvious that
any mechanism that can link people with needed treatment and
with treatment for co-occurring, for not only their mental
illness but substance abuse, is good.
I would say that the early data that I have seen, at least,
in places like Broward County is very favorable. For example,
the court has been successful in linking people with treatment.
The court has been successful in preventing recidivism. Very
few people who have been under the jurisdiction of the court
have re-offended.
Another intangible that is difficult to measure is sort of
the experience of the individuals who have come through the
court, by and large people who have reported that the
experiences have been very positive. They have not been
coercive. They have felt that the judge and the court were very
supportive.
One other point I would make is that the judges--I have met
a number of judges and the judges, as is true for Justice
Stratton, have come real advocates and sort of use their bench
as a bully pulpit to advocate for services that don't exist.
Again, using Broward County as an example, where there is
just a lack of community mental health services, lack of
housing, the judge has been able to go before the legislature
and actually lobby and get resources for housing and for
treatment for mental illness and substance abuse.
So, again, I would make the point that it is not the only
approach, that there are a number of different approaches that
need to be tried, and it is up to each community to decide to
work best. Mental health courts certainly seem to me to be a
very positive development and a very positive experience for
those who have been through them.
Senator DeWine. Justice Stratton?
Justice Stratton. There are, in fact, not very many
statistics because they are all relatively new, but the oldest
one in Ohio is the Akron court, Judge Stormer. She had a drug
court, started the mental health docket within her drug court,
devoted two full days to just people who were mentally ill and
also had a co-occurring disorder, helped put together the task
force that started the CIT program. And not just because of the
court, but because of the CIT diverting to the facility the
community agreed on, her docket has dropped in half. She only
has one day a week now for the people who are mentally ill.
The anecdotal stories of the physical changes in
appearance, people who started getting jobs who haven't worked
for years, people going back to college--the stories these
judges tell of the difference in the lives of people from the
first day they appeared to when they graduated from the program
are just heart-warming.
Senator DeWine. The main emphasis, frankly, of this bill is
the collaborative effort, and what we require is law
enforcement has to be a part of it and the mental health
community has to be a part of it.
I am going to quote something that Justice Stratton wrote
in her prepared testimony. She says, ``Taxpayer dollars are
paying for police officers to repeatedly arrest, transport, and
process mentally ill defendants, as well as for jail costs
associated with treatment, crisis intervention, salaries of
judges, and, of course, staff prosecutors and defense attorneys
and many more hidden costs. The question becomes would we
rather spend these dollars to keep mentally ill citizens
homeless, revolving in and out of our criminal justice system,
or would we rather spend these dollars to help them become
stable, productive citizens?''
I guess the question then is, you know, why aren't we doing
this more? Senator Leahy asked Director Wilkinson that, and I
would ask maybe some of the rest of you the question. Why
haven't we in the past been doing more of these collaborative
efforts and what is it that has stopped us from doing that? Is
it money? Is it culture, a culture that means that law
enforcement doesn't talk to treatment, treatment doesn't talk
to substance abuse people? We have all kind of seen that over
the years. I think we are doing better, but what is it?
Mr. Wilkinson. My first take is the squeaky wheel gets the
grease. We have not squeaked loud enough, like law enforcement
and like some other venues have. We are here squeaking today,
Senator, that there are other ways that we can skin the public
safety cat, that we can divert funds to. But we can't forget
about the public safety notion that we are currently doing. It
has to be a gradual process.
But probably more so than anything else, it is going to
take leadership for people to have a bigger vision about
tackling the mental health problem, the co-occurring disorder
problem, the problem for people who have retardation. It is
going to take people who can tie all of that together and see a
bigger picture of answers rather than what we have seen before.
Otherwise, it is going to be business as usual.
Mr. Campbell. Senator, if I could add, in fact, I was quite
shocked. When I learned first about the co-occurrence about
three years ago when I had a constituent that was going through
this with her daughter, similar very much to Ms. Atkins, I was
shocked. I couldn't believe that they weren't dealing with both
issues at once. Everyone was trying to point the finger at
someone else.
It was like turf wars almost and people were concerned
about who was going to get what funding, and if we don't
justify our position and our use here, then we are not going to
get the funds. I find that to be abhorrent and I am glad that
we are finally discussing it, and your bill here is going to
force the States to make sure that they do work in a
collaborative fashion.
Senator DeWine. Justice Stratton?
Justice Stratton. I think it has been a culture issue more
than anything. I have found that groups just never talk to each
other, like the experience I had with Franklin County. The
trial courts are very isolated from the mental health
community. Drug and Alcohol is very fixed with their funding.
When I brought them to the table and said let's talk
together and they started talking, barriers came down and
people found ways to work together. I have had almost no
resistance to people working together. The Department of
Corrections sits on our board, Probation sits on our board, and
Mental Health. All these people started talking. That is what
it makes a difference.
Senator DeWine. Everybody is well-intended, everybody wants
to do the right thing. It is just that when you get up in the
morning, that is not what you do. I mean, you just don't work
with the other group. You just go about and do your own
business. I mean, we have all been in courthouses. We know how
things work. You know, the mental health folks are over here
and substance abuse is over here, and we are doing our thing--
as a prosecutor, we did our thing in criminal justice and we
just didn't necessarily work together.
Justice Stratton. But where your bill can really make a
difference is that sometimes funding is a galvanizing force; it
is a catalyst. When communities say, okay, there is some
funding available, but we have got to put a task force together
and we have got to communicate and we have got to collaborate
before we can get the funding, it is the catalyst that can get
that to happen. So in that sense, it can really be important.
Senator DeWine. That is the idea.
Senator Durbin.
STATEMENT OF HON. RICHARD J. DURBIN, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE
STATE OF ILLINOIS
Senator Durbin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you for this
hearing and this important legislation. I would be honored if
you would add me as a cosponsor of this bill.
Senator DeWine. We appreciate that. Thank you very much.
Senator Durbin. Let me also thank the panel for your
contributions. Though I wasn't here for your actual testimony,
I have reviewed your statements and I appreciate what you have
added to this record.
I also would like to note for the record that our former
colleague, Paul Simon, now at Southern Illinois University in
Carbondale, last year held a meeting with former Surgeon
General David Satcher on this issue and wrote us all a letter.
Obviously, if you didn't get the letter, you were inspired by
your own means, but I am glad to be able to tell Paul that--
Senator DeWine. Paul has been a real leader in this area.
Paul really gets it, gets the whole problem.
Senator Durbin. If it is permitted, I would like to add to
the record the findings of his conference last year, which is
relevant.
Senator DeWine. It will be made a part of the record.
Senator Durbin. I would like to ask a few questions based
on some of his findings which I think might be interesting if
this panel could address.
Senator Simon as a result of this asked, or at least
requested that all those incarcerated be screened for mental
illness, developmental disabilities, and learning disabilities
as part of the initial processing as they enter the
correctional system.
Is that done now or is that something that may or may not
emerge during the entire criminal process and may, in fact,
emerge later in some instances where it finally is realized
that we are dealing with a situation with mental illness?
Justice Stratton. It is something that is not done. I don't
know about the prison system, but at the local jail system it
is frequently not done and it is part of why we have very poor
statistics. One of the things we urge in our collaboration
effort is an intake process that even asks some basic questions
about what mental health illnesses or treatment they have had
to even help us identify it.
That is one of the things we hope to have funding for. That
is one of the things that does require funding, is somebody who
can be trained, ask the questions, and deal with the intake
process, because we just don't even have any statistics because
there is very little done. That is one of the things we are
trying to put into the whole collaborative process.
I know that the Department of Correction has done some
things on that and I would like Reggie to speak to that.
Senator Durbin. Before Dr. Wilkinson or others respond, I
am tempted to divert my questioning into another line as to how
a person can go through a criminal trial, when one of us
learned in law school that one of the first questions you asked
is whether they had the criminal intent or whether they were
capable of forming that criminal intent. If that person is, in
fact, seriously mentally ill and it is not even discovered at
the point when they are incarcerated, it appears to me that the
important question was not asked at an earlier stage that might
have related to the guilt of the defendant.
Justice Stratton. I can explain how that works.
Senator Durbin. Maybe that is for another hearing. I don't
know.
Justice Stratton. I can explain briefly how that works. At
the felony level, most of the time you do catch them when they
are screened. It is at the municipal level where they don't. If
you have a defendant and you know he has a mental problem, you
can plead him out and get him three days and he is out of jail.
Do you do that or do you let him go into the process, 30, 60,
90 days before he even gets a hearing and a psychiatric
evaluation, sits in jail now 30, 60, 90 days?
A lot of the criminal defense attorneys that I talked to
said I think it is my duty to get him out of jail as quickly as
possible. The problem is it doesn't get at the underlying
illness. So they often ignore the mental health problem, or
they may be acting competent at that exact moment, but may not
have been when they were arrested.
There are a lot of factors, but the basic thing is a lot of
them consider it better to move them through the system quickly
than get them caught up in the mental health process.
Senator Durbin. Dr. Wilkinson?
Mr. Wilkinson. Senator, there is an awful lot of mental
health assessment taking place. We think we do it well.
However, that varies across the country in both prisons and
jails regarding how well it is done. It is not cheap to do
initial assessments of thousands of people who come in and out
of your correctional facilities on an annual basis.
So we in some cases depend an awful lot on the sentencing
courts to give us that information in pre-sentence
investigation reports so that we don't have to go back and do
our own investigations regarding the pasts of these persons who
are coming. Benchmark programs can help resolve that in a
significant way.
The other thing that we don't do well, including in our
system, is detecting those persons who either have a mental
illness and deteriorate while they are in prison or the people
who develop a mental illness while they are incarcerated.
Senator Durbin. So let me take it to the next step. Let's
now talk about the population that has now been discovered to
be suffering from some form of mental illness and they are
incarcerated, and that, I think, has been suggested 16 percent
serious mental illness. At least that is our benchmark figure
for this discussion.
What percentage of those receive medication and treatment
during incarceration? Does anyone know?
Mr. Wilkinson. Senator, of the 16 percent, we guesstimate
about half of those have a serious mental illness, which means
that they require a lot more supervision, they require
medication, they require in some cases hospitalization.
Hospitalization is sometimes short. What we do is have
intermediary housing areas where we can take the persons who
have a very visible mental illness.
A lot of people in our correctional institutions with a
mental illness, you don't know it if they are on their
medication because they can behave normally with medication.
But at least half of that 16 percent is on some sort of
psychopharmacology.
Mr. Honberg. Senator, if I just could quickly add, I know
that in Ohio, in particular, Reggie Wilkinson has done some
marvelous things in creating programs. But I have tell you,
around the country, the way that people with mental illnesses
who are incarcerated in jails and prisons are treated is
frequently deplorable.
I mean, people may have access to medication if they are
overtly psychotic, at least for as long as they are psychotic.
But I have seen it many times. People with mental illnesses
tend to get sent to the worst units in the prison. There is
excessive use of solitary confinement, there is excessive use
of seclusion and restraints. It is a nightmare and it is
oftentimes in circumstances that are only going to make the
symptoms worse.
That is why it is so important to have legislation like
this and to have a movement like this that is designed to get
at least low-level offenders out of these facilities and into
community treatment.
Senator Durbin. I want to get to two more questions and I
don't know how much time I have remaining.
Senator DeWine. You have plenty of time.
Senator Durbin. Thank you.
In the situation where you have someone who is mentally ill
and incarcerated and has been diagnosed and is now being
treated, who pays for the treatment?
Mr. Wilkinson. The taxpayers of that State, sir.
Senator Durbin. Is the Federal Government involved at all?
Mr. Wilkinson. No.
Senator Durbin. No Medicaid, no Medicare?
Mr. Wilkinson. No. In fact, the law excludes persons who
are in detention from receiving any Medicaid funds whatsoever.
Senator Durbin. Justice Stratton?
Justice Stratton. One of the problems we are struggling
with in Ohio is if you are in jail, just even jail for a
shorter-term sentence, after 30 days your Medicaid is cut off.
That means now they have to go get a psychiatrist to do a new
evaluation to give medications which may be different than what
they are used to.
If they get out of jail in 60 days, they may not even get
the new medication by the time their other 30 days are up. The
door is open, they walk out. Now, they have to re-apply for
Medicaid. It may be months before they get it. They
decompensate and they are back in prison before they ever get
back on Medicaid. So it is a reentry problem that we are really
having a struggle with as well.
Senator Durbin. You have taken me, Justice, to the point I
wanted to get to, and this goes back to Senator Simon's
conference which he held. He recommended something which I hope
Senator DeWine will consider as part of his legislation. He
believes that there is a missing link in the current system
which you have just noted--access to medication after mentally
ill offenders are released.
I would like to ask anyone on the panel to discuss the
merits of providing Medicaid presumptive eligibility for
mentally ill offenders upon release from incarceration. Under
presumptive eligibility, mental health and health care
providers would be able to grant mentally ill offenders
immediate short-term Medicaid eligibility while a formal
determination is being made. This presumptive eligibility would
be intended to provide immediate access to mental health and
health care services such as psychotherapy, medication, and
rehab.
I think you have just identified the problem. You have
someone who, after a long period of time, is finally receiving
some medication. Now, they are released, and that should be
good news, but it may be the worst news because, being
released, they are released without medication or help. Then
they have to, if they can ever figure the process out, get into
it, make application, and hope that they receive their
medication in time before they do something that is harmful to
themselves or others.
Justice Stratton. One of the things we are working on
through both the reentry court and through my committee is
trying to set up a process that hooks up a defendant before his
sentence ends with the Medicaid process, get the applications
in, and get the approval before he steps out the door because
most of them--you know, they may be given a two-week supply and
they are out the door.
They don't even know how to get to a Medicaid office. They
don't even know what a Medicaid office is, as you said, to even
go through the process. So there is a huge link in there that
is fixable. It is very fixable. It is a matter of finding the
process to make it work and starting it before they walk out
that door.
I am delighted to hear you say that because my committee
has been struggling with this issue and I am so excited to hear
some focus on it because it is a huge problem we have all
across the country.
Senator Durbin. I want to give my friend, Senator Simon,
credit for it.
I hope we can consider adding this as part of our
conversation on this.
If I could ask one last question, and that is it appears to
me--I spoke to our Illinois Director of Corrections a couple of
years ago about what he was challenged with and he was telling
me about the over-crowding situation and the complexity of the
inmates, the challenges that they brought, and so forth and so
on, and he talked about this issue of mental illness and what
to do with it. It struck me that our profile of the
qualifications of a corrections officer doesn't reflect the
reality of what the Department of Corrections faced today.
When we talk about mental illness in the corrections
system, for those who can address it, are there people who are
being trained and recruited to deal with this new phenomenon so
they can recognize the potential mental illness with an early
screening or a developing situation and protect those inmates
who may be potential suicide victims or victims themselves
within the institution? Are we developing that expertise at a
time when many States are saying we are out of money, we can
barely house the people that are being sent to us, let alone
provide any kind of special services?
Dr. Wilkinson?
Mr. Wilkinson. Senator, it is a great question. The issue
relates to basic training for corrections officers. If the
corrections system does not do training for first-line
personnel such as a corrections officer and others regarding
how to detect unusual behaviors--we are not wanting them to be
clinicians. We just want them to be able to detect behavior
that is unusual so that they can refer that to the proper staff
person.
A third-shift officer, for example, doesn't have on his or
her shift a person that they can immediately get to, other than
maybe a third-shift nurse. But that is woefully inadequate when
we are talking about a person who has got a serious psychiatric
problem and that problem is manifesting itself in a security
concern.
So if we aren't doing it--and some jurisdictions do it very
adequately--if we aren't doing it, then the Federal courts are
going to intervene because it is going to manifest itself in a
lot of other problems that we don't want to deal with.
Senator Durbin. I want to thank the panel and thank you,
Mr. Chairman.
Senator DeWine. Senator Durbin, thank you very much for
very constructive comments.
Let me thank our panel. This has been, I think, an
excellent hearing. I appreciate the fact that you all are here.
Ms. Atkins, thank you very much for coming here notice.
Ms. Atkins. Thank you. My pleasure.
Senator DeWine. We appreciate your making time to come here
and we wish you and your daughter well.
We have two statements that need to be entered into the
record, which I am going to do. The statement of Chairman Hatch
will be made a part of the record. Also, I would like to enter
into this record of this hearing a letter from the Chairman of
President Bush's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, Dr.
Mike Hogan. Attached to Dr. Hogan's letter are several pages
from the commission's July 2003 report that are directly
relevant to S. 1194.
Again, let me thank all of our witnesses. I would also like
on a personal note to thank Evelyn Fortier, who is a member of
my staff, who I know has been in contact with all of you.
Unfortunately for me, at least, and I think for Congress,
Evelyn will be leaving us, I hope, on a temporary basis, but
she will be leaving us at the end of the week. We would not be
here today on this hearing, and I don't think we would be here
with this bill without Evelyn's help.
So, Evelyn, thank you very much for your hard work. We
appreciate it very much.
[Applause.]
Senator DeWine. We hope Evelyn will be back with us in the
not too distant future.
Let me again thank all of you very much for your very, very
good testimony. I think it has been an excellent panel,
excellent testimony, and we hope to move this bill forward.
Thank you very much.
[Whereupon, at 3:37 p.m., the Committee was adjourned.]
[Questions and answers and submissions for the record
follow.]
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