Plugging CIT In McKenna Case: New “Voices” Documentary Well Worth Watching

WUSA Report About Natasha McKenna

In this news story, I push for Crisis Intervention Team training and Ron Honberg, the director of policy and legal affairs for the National Alliance on Mental Illness, asks the all important question: why was a woman with mental illness in jail rather than getting treatment. Thanks to WUSA Reporter Peggy Fox for being the only Washington D.C. television reporter who continues to focus a spotlight on this tragic story.

voices

VOICES, a documentary film by Gary Tsai, MD.,

—tells three stories from the perspective of families and persons with mental illnesses. It’s gripping and well worth seeing when it begins being aired on PBS in May. I am enthusiastically recommending it. Like so many of us, psychiatrist Tsai has a personal reason for caring about our broken mental health system, which he explains on the film’s website.

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Washington Post Confirms My Stories About Natasha McKenna

Restraint Chair Similar To One Used At Jail

Restraint Chair Similar To One Used At Jail

April 13, 2015, Shortly after 12 o’clock on Monday, Tom Jackman, an investigative reporter at the Washington Post, confirmed what I had posted in my blog earlier that morning about a January 31st incident during which Natasha McKenna was slapped by a Fairfax deputy. His reporting is based on internal incident reports that he obtained that were written by sheriff’s deputies and other jail personnel and leaked to him.

Several key facts that he revealed were first mentioned in earlier blog posts that I had written about McKenna. However, my posts were dismissed by jail officials, including one who told reporters that I was exaggerating. Another dismissed my earlier posts as “hearsay” that was “completely unsubstantiated.” 

“Pete Earley could just be making that stuff up,” he told a reporter. 

Thank you Tom for your continued vigilance and digging. You have proven that my earlier accounts were not “made up” and you have exposed new and detailed information about this preventible tragedy.

Jackman also is the Post reporter who revealed how county officials were keeping secret information about the Fairfax police shooting of  John Greer .

 

The death of Natasha McKenna in the Fairfax jail: The rest of the story
By Tom Jackman posted April 13 at 12:44 PM

In compiling the article for Sunday’s paper about the death of Natasha McKenna after she was Tasered four times, a number of items were omitted for various reasons related to space and deadlines. To provide additional context on this complicated case, here are some further important items to consider, beginning with this fact: The entire incident was captured on video.

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Fairfax Woman Was Already Restrained When Shot Repeatedly With Taser

natashaMY SOURCES CLAIM ANOTHER ALTERCATION STILL HASN’T BEEN MADE PUBLIC

April 13, 2005, The Washington Post  published disturbing new information on Sunday about the death of Natasha McKenna, a 37- year old woman with schizophrenia who died after being struck by a taser while in the Fairfax County Detention Center. On February 10th, I noted on this blog that the 130 pound McKenna had been shot repeatedly with a taser even though she had initially agreed to cooperate with deputies trying to remove her from her cell. That blog prompted the Post and other Washington area media to launch their own investigations.

Now Washington Post reporters Tom Jackman and Justin Jouvenal have provided the public with the first complete picture of what happened to McKenna on the day that she was shocked four times with 50,000 volts. Their story, which is based on internal incident reports, is especially difficult to read if you have a loved ones with a mental illness who has been arrested.

The internal reports reveal that McKenna was “restrained with handcuffs behind her back, leg shackles and a mask when a sheriff’s deputy shocked her four times.”

There is still more to this story, according to my sources. Before McKenna was shot with a taser, she was involved in an altercation three days earlier on January 31st after she leaned a mattress in her cell against the door to block a window so deputies could not see inside. Two deputies decided to open the door, grab the mattress, and jerk it out of the cell before McKenna could react. However, McKenna grabbed the mattress and was dragged with it out of her cell.  A female deputy reacted by striking McKenna with an open palm against her head, my sources said.

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I Get A Call About Officer Who Fatally Shot Man With Schizophrenia: Another Preventible Tragedy

CBS Nightly News called me this week to ask if I would talk on camera about Crisis Intervention Team Training for law enforcement. The call was prompted by the release of a video that shows police officers shooting Lavall Hall, a 25 year-old black man, in Miami, Florida.  I explained that I couldn’t talk directly about the Hall case, but I happily explained to a producer what CIT is and why it is important. I then suggested the producer call Sam Cochran, who is widely seen as the “Father of CIT,” and Mike Woody, a former Ohio police officer who is president of CIT International. 

Although CBS passed on interviewing me on camera, I was thrilled to get the call because it showed that news outlets are becoming more aware of CIT and the need for specialized police training.

The Hall shooting is an all to common example of how things can go wrong when police are called to deal with a medical problem.

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Bryan Stevenson Proves Another Death Row Inmate Innocent Just As He Did In My Book: Circumstantial Evidence

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Hinton with Stevenson

Bryan Stevenson has done it again!

Anthony Ray Hinton, one of the longest serving death row prisoners in Alabama history, has been exonerated thanks to Stevenson and the Equal Justice Initiative  that he founded. Hinton spent 30 years incarcerated for a crime that he did not commit.

I describe in my book, Circumstantial Evidence, how Stevenson proved another black man on Alabama’s death row innocent more than two decades ago. Walter “Johnny D” McMillian was condemned to death for the 1986 murder of a white teenage girl after two witnesses testified that they’d seen his truck parked at the scene of the killing and another witness claimed that he actually had see McMillian standing over the dead girl during a robbery.  The case against McMillian seemed indisputable until Stevenson began investigating.

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Husband’s Struggle Gave Her Life A New Purpose and Meaning

joe

From My Files Friday: One of the most widely read posts on this website was written by Kathleen Maloney about her husband Joe. Here’s that original blog along with an update about a surprising decision that Kathleen has made.

What I went through while trying to get Joe help, and watching him suffer for so long, has changed me. It gave my life purpose and meaning. After telling our story,  I received hundreds of emails and phone calls from people all over America, and even as far away as Australia. They all shared similar stories: Spouses caring for husbands or wives, sisters caring for brothers, daughters caring for fathers. Many were heartbreaking because these people were coping without help. They were and are alone.

This year, I will finish the memoir I’ve been working on since Joe’s death, and I will begin the arduous task of finding a publisher. This year, I also plan to move to Ireland, which I visited during a vacation in search of my roots. Stigma of mental illness in Ireland is even more prevalent than it is here in the United States. Suicides are at an all-time high, especially among young males ages 20 to 24. So, after I get settled, I plan to help raise awareness and reduce the stigma of mental illness in Ireland. (Read more at the end of this blog about Kathleen’s ongoing story.)

Bipolar Disorder Destroyed Joe’s Life

  By Kathleen Maloney

My husband Joe and I enjoyed 18 wonderful years together. We had a beautiful daughter and our lives were filled with love, laughter, joy, hard work and exciting plans for the future.

That was before he got sick, before he was diagnosed with a mental illness.

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