Showing posts with label mental health courts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mental health courts. Show all posts

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Woman kept dead friend 18 months and cashed his checks

Woman who kept dead friend for 18 months, cashing his benefit checks, pleads guilty, will enter mental health court
By Aaron Aupperlee
October 31, 2012

JACKSON, MI —€” With supportive family members seated on a court bench behind her, a woman admitted to cashing regular benefit checks of a friend months after he died.

Linda Chase, 72, pleaded guilty Wednesday to two counts of larceny by conversion, a felony punishable by up to five years. More severe counts of forgery, a 14-year felony, were dismissed as part of the plea arrangement.

Chase, who kept her friend and roommate, Charles Zigler, for 18 months after he died, will likely not spend time in jail or prison and instead receive probation, said District Judge Michael Klaeren.
read more here

Monday, October 6, 2008

Mental Health Court budget cut is counterproductive

Not only is it counterproductive, it is an injustice. The mental health community has worked tirelessly to be able to raise awareness of the difference between someone who has an impaired mental state and those who have criminal intent. Aside from getting average citizens into treatment instead of jail, it has also been raising awareness of the unique circumstances when combat veterans come home wounded by PTSD and end up in trouble. This is one of the last things that should be cut from a budget, especially one that is facing tight financial times. It will only increase the numbers of incarcerated individuals and many of them don't belong there.

Mental Health Court makes strides, but funds drying up
By M.S. Enkoji - menkoji@sacbee.com
Published 12:00 am PDT Monday, October 6, 2008
Story appeared in OUR REGION section, Page B1
Sacramento Bee - CA, USA


Every week, Superior Court Judge Jaime Román finds a reason among a pile of stuffed manila folders to lead applause in his courtroom.

Both sides of the courtroom join him with genuine joy.

"You are incredibly positive," Román said to a woman standing before him who beamed at his praise. She's a criminal – a mentally ill one.


But she's garnering high praise from a judge, a prosecutor and a probation officer.

Sacramento County's Mental Health Court is diverting mentally ill, habitual, nonviolent offenders away from a cycle that spins them through jail and back on the street.

For a year to 18 months, with intense supervision, classes, medical treatment, unannounced monitoring, housing and transportation assistance – and regular check-ins with Román – they rebuild their lives and stay out of jail.

Mental health court is saving millions in criminal justice costs, as it has in Santa Clara County, supporters say. And it could save much more.

"We're taking people who, through no fault of their own, can't function as a regular part of society and we're helping them," said Siena Riffia, a Sacramento County public defender who works in Mental Health Court.

But just as the new court is hitting stride with stable graduates in school and on the job, the new state budget has virtually gutted the whole effort.

"There is no money," Román said to a handful of stunned clients in his courtroom last week.
go here for more
http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/1290767.html