Inadequate medical treatment for prisoners? Nothing new for the mentally ill!
With all the
COVID19 commotion, we must not forget the mentally ill in prison.
Sadly, a
town hall session on the topic, scheduled to be held in Grand Haven in March,
had to be canceled due to the coronavirus. The discussion was timely, and it’s
still needed.
I’m writing
a book that may or may not ever get finished, and may or may not ever get read
by anyone. I’m trying to focus on the incidents and people in the formative
years of Humanity for Prisoners that helped shape who we are and what we do
today. Our heart for the mentally ill did not just happen by accident.
2008 was a
significant year.
MaryAnn had
contacted me about her mentally ill brother, an old guy who never should have
been sent to prison in the first place. He got into a pissing match with a
neighbor, and some tough-on-crime judge decided that this mentally challenged
individual deserved prison time.
Once behind
bars, old Arnie was always in trouble. He’d stand in line hoping to buy some
socks when guards would ticket him for being in the wrong place. One hot summer
day they got so upset with him they threw him in the hole, then turned off his
cold water. The COs thought it was hilarious when his only option was scalding
water.
I had the
satisfaction of sitting in the courtroom when the State Supreme Court forced
that inept judge to reduce Arnie’s sentence and let him out for time served.
And then
Lois contacted me about her son Kevin, a teenager who didn’t belong in the
adult prison system. Kevin asked if I might be able to help Kyle, another young
teen. Both boys were mentally challenged and shamefully treated by Michigan
prison guards. Both arrested at age 13. I personally visited both of them.
I heard
stories of Kyle sitting in his bunk crying, after guards showed him an orange
and said that this was the size of the testicles of a man who was coming to
rape him.
And Detroit
Free Press reporter Jeff Gerritt put a picture of Kevin on the front page. The
teen was chained to his bunk in Ionia Max, wearing a helmet because he wouldn’t
stop banging his head against the wall.
These are
real people, ladies and gentlemen, not unlike the mentally imbalanced boys,
girls, mothers and dads in our own lives, and there’s no justification for
treatment like that.
Those stories
helped shape our attitude regarding mentally ill behind bars. So, it’s no wonder
after receiving numerous reports of abuse from whistleblowers at Women’s Huron
Valley, that we, in turn, blew the whistle. The U. S. Department of Justice
launched a lengthy investigation into shameful treatment of mentally ill women
in 2014 because of our efforts.
While the coronavirus
gets top billing these days, the much lower profile mental illness issue is no
less worrisome and must not be ignored.
We are here
for them.
Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven.
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