Pubdate: Sun, 22 Feb 2009 Source: Ledger, The (Lakeland, FL) Copyright: 2009 The Ledger Contact: http://www.theledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/795 Author: Sherman Moreland U.S. SOLUTION FOR MANY MENTALLY ILL PEOPLE IS TO IMPRISON, NOT TREAT On Jan. 31 and Feb. 5, The Ledger carried op-ed columns by Cathy Hatch and Risdon N. Slate. They each dealt with the imprisonment of the mentally ill. America's criminal-justice system routinely processes mentally ill people through its so-called correction facilities, otherwise known as prisons. Occupying prison cells are 2.3 million people, making the United States the No. 1 prison nation in the world, which in turn causes America to have the most mentally ill people in prison cells of all other nations. For centuries, mentally ill people have been the pariahs of society, feared, loathed, abused, warehoused in "snake pit" asylums and state mental hospitals - 19th- and 20th-century versions of London's infamous Bedlam of Dickens' time. Because New York state was unable to sufficiently modernize and reform its system of state mental hospitals, it closed them. Outpatient clinics took their place, and jails and prisons claimed the overflow. In New York state "insanity" is the most difficult defense to make because of an 1893 court ruling that established a legal test called "The McNaughton Rule," which asks only one question: Did the defendant know the nature and quality of the act committed? If so, the defendant is not insane. How does such a 19th-century anachronism survive despite modern medical knowledge and practice that renders it a dinosaur? It's because the law and its minions are as Mr. Bumble suggested in Dickens' tale of Oliver Twist. Perhaps less of an "ass" and more of a chameleon, which would rather blend into and remain an indistinguishable part of the existing legal environment than disturb it. My 50 years of New York state experience at the bar and on the bench provided me with an up-close-and-personal window of observation from which to view the passing scene. It's not pretty and poses the question, "Does society give a damn?" Sherman Moreland Lakeland - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin