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![]() On Tue, 18 Dec 2012 16:47:34 -0500, wrote: I keep hearing about these closed mental hospitals but most were actually closed because civil rights and privacy advocates took away all of the patients. It is very hard to keep someone in a mental hospital after 72 hours if they want to go. There is a guy around the corner from me who has been "Baker acted" at least 30 times in the last 10 years (hauled away by the cops and put in for observation). Sometimes he goes into rehab for a few weeks on our dime, he calls it the spa, but most of the time he is home after a few days. Even court ordered (non-criminal) commitments can easily be vacated if the patient files a "show cause" motion and there are lots of "rights" groups who will file the motion for you. There are at least three large mental health facilities with forensic wards in your state of Florida. My wife did her internship at one of them, a 650-bed facility. At the time she worked there, there were several hundred persons resident who had been committed for substantial or even indeterminate terms as a result of serious, violent criminal activities in which they had engaged. Your "guy around the corner" sounds like someone who is a drug addict and who gets out of control but is not judged a threat to others. A "Baker Act" commitment is for 72 hours, after which a judge determines if cause can be demonstrated for a longer commitment. If not, as is usually the case, the individual is released. Most communities these days simply don't have out-patient treatment available for the indigent, so they end up hospitalized. |
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