February 10, 2012

Merging Psychiatry and Crime

This brief article raises many issues about psychiatry, police and journalism. Psychiatric hospitals have notoriously lax security. In some cases the employees encourage patients to escape so that they can punish them or report them to police.

Police descriptions of persons with disabilities are notoriously frightening and misleading. Reports by journalists encourage police to think of persons with disabilities as dangerous and to treat them as if they are, beating them unnecessarily.

This report promotes the idea that all persons who accused of being psychotic are criminals. It is a pervasive belief promoted by journalists and the psychiatric industry that mental patients are criminals. The psychiatric and drug industries advocate merging psychiatry and crime. Saying a person "can be extremely violent" applies to all people, not just those accused of being psychotic. Crime must be kept separate from psychiatry. This man violated the law and needs to pay for what he did. Using psychiatry to mitigate criminal behavior is a corruption of the criminal justice system.


[From article]
"Police [. . .] said he (sic) “highly psychotic” and can be extremely violent."

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/la_police_search_for_escapee_who_52ycTwcGTVctWL1IXtzPYP

LA police capture 'violent' Madonna stalker who escaped from mental hospital
ASSOCIATED PRESS
New York Post
Last Updated: 2:04 PM, February 10, 2012
Posted: 9:47 AM, February 10, 2012
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http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2012/02/ex-stalkers-comments-led-police-to-find-him-in-long-beach.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+lanowblog+%28L.A.+Now%29

Madonna stalker's comments led to arrest in Long Beach
February 10, 2012 | 12:29 pm
Sam Quinones

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