March 16, 2007

ELEVATING FREEDOM:

Tragedy follows landmark court win: After success in a long fight against forced medication, a schizophrenic man gained freedom. But now he is accused of killing his roommate (Lee Romney and Scott Gold, March 16, 2007, LA Times)

ON a crisp afternoon last fall, a police officer responding to a 911 call pulled onto an abandoned military base on the eastern edge of San Francisco Bay. Six dreary naval housing blocks, converted into apartments for down-on-their-luck veterans, had been painted with labels meant to inspire: Hope, Resolve.

The door to Apartment B, in the building called Courage, was open. The man who had summoned police, Kanuri Qawi, was waiting casually in the doorway, a glass of soda in his hand.

Qawi invited the officer inside and began spinning a wild tale. Intruders, he insisted, had entered his apartment. They had robbed him of $300, then stripped him naked, strapped him to a flatbed truck and paraded him through the streets. As Qawi talked, incense burned, but it could not hide the smell. It was the smell, the officer knew, of decaying flesh.

The officer asked if he could have a look around, then pushed open the door of an empty bedroom. Qawi's roommate, John Laird Milton Sr., was lying on his back, his body stiff, his face blue. His blood was splattered three feet up the wall. Next to the body were his glasses and one white sock. An autopsy would reveal that he had been stabbed seven times, once in the heart. He had been dead about a week.

Interviewed by investigators, Qawi was consumed by what he described as an elaborate conspiracy: how staffers at the apartment complex had called him a homosexual; how they wanted to kick him out because he had been "contaminated" by radiation during the Chernobyl meltdown.

Police quickly realized that Qawi, 46, was suffering from delusions. What they didn't know that day was how long and hard he had fought for the right to have them.

Qawi was a notorious figure in California mental hospitals. His nine-year legal battle had taken him all the way to the state Supreme Court, where he had won the right -- for himself and hundreds of other mental patients -- to refuse to take the psychiatric drugs prescribed by doctors.

His case was a seminal chapter in the campaign to modernize mental health treatment and give patients more control over their bodies. And in key ways, it helped transform California's mental hospitals, with a growing number of patients rejecting their drugs, suffering psychotic breaks and lashing out in violence.


When you make freedom the ultimate value, without concern for whether the individual is even capable of taking responsibility for what he does with it, you're pretty much begging for such outcomes.

Posted by Orrin Judd at March 16, 2007 12:00 AM
Comments

he had won the right ... to refuse to take the psychiatric drugs prescribed by doctors.

Which in a rational society would mean that he should not be allowed any sort of "diminished capacity" defense. He should be held responsible for his decision to become insane.

Posted by: Raoul Ortega at March 16, 2007 10:51 AM

The California Supreme Court should declare itself insane, else the justices should be held personally liable to the death of the roommate, and the deterioration of Qawi's condition.

Posted by: ic at March 16, 2007 11:46 AM

"Tragedy follows landmark court win"

Standing hed.

Posted by: Bob Hawkins at March 16, 2007 12:40 PM

Was a guy in Honolulu a few years back who was a similar case--he had been institutionalized in the past but was living on his own. Killed an old jogger on the street one morning, and nearly took out a few more people. Turned out he had been arrested by police something like 30 times for minor offenses in the previous couple of years, but was always immediately released because he was obviously mentally impaired--the police couldn't put him in jail, the psych wards couldn't keep him in custody, and social services couldn't force him to take his medicine.

Posted by: b at March 16, 2007 4:49 PM

b. thank Jimmy for his compassion in letting the mentally afflicted out of the big bad institutions where they were taken care of and put out on the mean streets where they were a menace to themselves and their fellow citizens.

Posted by: erp at March 18, 2007 7:27 AM
« THE CAR AS PEW: | Main | THAT PAPER MONEY FAD CAN'T END FAST ENOUGH: »