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Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/2013 6:54 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
Tightening state budgets have widened the gap in available beds. In the wake of the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting that claimed 32 lives, Virginia’s legislature took measures to revamp the emergency-evaluation processes, updated the criteria for involuntary psychiatric commitment and raised state funding for community mental-health services. But according to a report from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Virginia’s overall state mental-health budget decreased $37.7 million dollars from $424.3 million to $386.6 million between fiscal years 2009 and 2012. “The consequences of not providing treatment should demonstrate the importance of the need for it,” says Kristina Ragosta, director of advocacy at the Treatment Advocacy Center. “Most people with mental illness are no more violent than the general population, but when we talk about people with untreated mental illness, they are at greater risk of committing violent acts.” Even the private facilities are tough to get into right away. They are usually full and there's often a waiting period for a bed. It's hard because it takes a herculean effort by friends and family to convince an addict that they need help and even a day's delay can result in the person going back into denial mode and refusing help. The situation I am familiar with took several attempts over a 2 year period to finally get the person into rehab. The first time he agreed to go and his friends got him into a facility in Boston. He stayed overnight and was evaluated by a shrink the next day. The shrink determined he was suffering from anxiety and depression and prescribed some pills to make him feel better. All it did was make matters worse because he left the facility the next day, now armed with a prescription anti-depressants along with his alcohol addiction. When he finally hit "rock bottom", he still wouldn't admit he had a problem. He was now drinking plus taking some over-the-counter medication that, when combined with booze, produced a "high" similar to the anti-depressant drugs the shrink had prescribed. He was a mess. Some of his friends finally got him into another 5 day de-tox. Temporarily sober, he left and by the next afternoon was passed out from drinking again. That was when we became actively involved in trying to get him some help but he continued to deny there was any problem. His personality had totally changed ... truly out of his mind, he had lost his job and was living in a shed in a friend's backyard. The next Saturday he was transported to a hospital for yet another overnight de-tox after being found by the police on a beach with booze and pills. The hospital discharged him the next day and he immediately hit the booze and pills again. On Sunday I visited to check up on him and found him laying unconscious and having difficulty breathing. Called 911 and back to the hospital he went. One of the cops told me that I should call the hospital and request that he have a psychiatric evaluation following the de-tox period and before he was released. He explained the "involuntary commitment" procedure for rehab in a state facility (which happens to be run in state prisons). I did as he suggested. The doc who conducted the evaluation called me the next morning and said that based on her observation she could *not* recommend involuntary commitment because she determined he was not an immediate threat to himself or others. She and I had quite a go-around about that, but she was patient with me and explained how the law works in the case of a court ordered commitment to rehab. Meanwhile, we had located a private facility who could take him but he had to agree to go within 24 hours, otherwise the bed would go to the next person on the list. So, I lied to him. I told him that I had all the paperwork and recommendations required for a court ordered, 30 day involuntary commitment to a state re-hab facility. I explained it would be a mandatory 30 day stay at a minimum. "Or", I said, "You can go to a private facility voluntarily and you can leave anytime you want if you don't like it." It still took much convincing and we now only had about 10 hours left before he would lose his spot in the private facility. At one point it got pretty testy and I thought things would get physical. He continued to refuse to go, so I told him that I had no choice and would make the phone call to have the police pick him up for transport to the state facility. That's what it took to get him to finally agree to enter re-hab at the private facility. He still didn't go cheerfully, but he went and has been clean since. The fog in his head has cleared and he has reverted back to the decent, considerate person that we and others knew him to be. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/2013 6:34 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
Your comment that because the young man's father is a state senator, a room would automatically be made available is just more of your uninformed nonsense. The reality is, many of the "facts" of this sad case are still unknown. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. Lack of facts hasn't stopped you from jumping to conclusions, in the past. -- Americans deserve better. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/2013 6:54 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 11/19/13, 10:18 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/19/2013 8:47 PM, wrote: On Tue, 19 Nov 2013 19:41:29 -0500, BAR wrote: The sad thing is that the kid, the one who offed himself, was released because they didn't have a bed in a pshyc facility available for him. I guess closing down all of the mental healht care facilities and releasing all of the nut jobs in the 70's served its purpose. That was mostly caused by a series of cases where the courts decided involuntary commitment equated to depriving a person of liberty and could only be imposed by due process. (14th amendment). Subsequent laws that defined "evaluations" further restricted exactly how long someone can be held with or without a court order. We don't know the details of this sad event, so this is pure speculation on my part, but it wouldn't surprise me if drug and/or alcohol addiction is involved with Gus (the son) still in total denial. The early reports indicate he had been released from an area hospital Monday following a mental health evaluation. That could also have been an overnight "detox" period followed by the mental health evaluation. Getting a court order for involuntary commitment is difficult. Laws protect the rights of the person in question. A shrink's evaluation that the person "could" or "might" hurt himself or others is not sufficient in itself to cause a judge to order an involuntary commitment. The person has to actually hurt him/herself (attempt suicide) or cause injury to another person in order to be involuntarily committed in most circumstances. This was explained to me last year when I was involved in getting someone some help for severe alcoholism. The fact that the person in question had a blood alcohol level that is considered "lethal" (450) and had been driving a car in a reckless manner (endangering others) still wasn't sufficient. I was flabbergasted to learn this, but that's the law. If the person in question is still in a state of denial of their addiction, but hasn't actually hurt him/herself or anyone else, it's tough to have them involuntarily committed. My speculation is that this may be the case in this situation. If Gus had been determined to be an *immediate* threat to himself or others by virtue of demonstrated action, a bed would have been found. I would guess there are a couple of detox facilities out there in rural Virginia, but no real psych hospital. The dad had to be flown to Charlottesville for treatment of his knife wounds, which tells me there isn't even much of a general hospital out there. It's a lightly populated county. Here's a bit from another news report: Streeting...is an issue Virginia has struggled with before. In 2011, Virginia inspector general G. Douglas Bevelacqua released a report chastising the state for turning away in a month an estimated 200 patients determined to be a threat to themselves or others who met the criteria for a temporary detention, only because state facilities lacked the room to hold them. Twenty-three of Virginia’s 40 community-services boards acknowledged that “streeting” occurred at their facilities. “I wouldn’t say this happens every day, but it’s more common than we’d like for it to be,” Mary Ann Bergeron, the executive director of the Virginia Association of Community Services Board, told the Washington Post. Under Virginia’s emergency-custody-order process, the family of a patient petitions a magistrate to order an evaluation, and medical staff have a four-hour window to decide whether someone should be committed, according to Cropper, who declined to speak about the specifics of the Deeds case out of respect for the family’s privacy. The clock starts when a sheriff picks up the patient and brings him or her in for clinical evaluation. Once the evaluation is complete, physicians make a recommendation to the magistrate. If the magistrate approves, medical staff then search for an available hospital bed. It all has to happen during the four-hour time frame. “We can sometimes get an extension of two hours on that, but beyond the six hours we cannot. So if we don’t find a bed within six hours, then an individual would have to be released. We can’t keep them,” says Cropper. The availability of inpatient psychiatric care has decreased nationally in recent years. Research from the Treatment Advocacy Center, a national nonprofit focused on eliminating barriers to treatment of severe mental illness, found that the number of state psychiatric beds decreased nationwide by 14% between 2005 and 2010. In 2005 there were 50,509 state psychiatric beds nationwide, and in 2010 there were 43,318. It’s estimated that a person with severe mental illness is three times more likely to be in a state prison than a psychiatric hospital. Tightening state budgets have widened the gap in available beds. In the wake of the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting that claimed 32 lives, Virginia’s legislature took measures to revamp the emergency-evaluation processes, updated the criteria for involuntary psychiatric commitment and raised state funding for community mental-health services. But according to a report from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Virginia’s overall state mental-health budget decreased $37.7 million dollars from $424.3 million to $386.6 million between fiscal years 2009 and 2012. “The consequences of not providing treatment should demonstrate the importance of the need for it,” says Kristina Ragosta, director of advocacy at the Treatment Advocacy Center. “Most people with mental illness are no more violent than the general population, but when we talk about people with untreated mental illness, they are at greater risk of committing violent acts.” Your mental health expert got her degree from a catholic girls liberal arts school. But I suppose she's as qualified to diagnose and treat mental illness as most of the quacks out there who release dangerous head cases back into society, declaring them cured or rehabilitated. -- Americans deserve better. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/13, 9:13 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/20/2013 6:54 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: Tightening state budgets have widened the gap in available beds. In the wake of the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting that claimed 32 lives, Virginia’s legislature took measures to revamp the emergency-evaluation processes, updated the criteria for involuntary psychiatric commitment and raised state funding for community mental-health services. But according to a report from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Virginia’s overall state mental-health budget decreased $37.7 million dollars from $424.3 million to $386.6 million between fiscal years 2009 and 2012. “The consequences of not providing treatment should demonstrate the importance of the need for it,” says Kristina Ragosta, director of advocacy at the Treatment Advocacy Center. “Most people with mental illness are no more violent than the general population, but when we talk about people with untreated mental illness, they are at greater risk of committing violent acts.” Even the private facilities are tough to get into right away. They are usually full and there's often a waiting period for a bed. It's hard because it takes a herculean effort by friends and family to convince an addict that they need help and even a day's delay can result in the person going back into denial mode and refusing help. The situation I am familiar with took several attempts over a 2 year period to finally get the person into rehab. The first time he agreed to go and his friends got him into a facility in Boston. He stayed overnight and was evaluated by a shrink the next day. The shrink determined he was suffering from anxiety and depression and prescribed some pills to make him feel better. All it did was make matters worse because he left the facility the next day, now armed with a prescription anti-depressants along with his alcohol addiction. When he finally hit "rock bottom", he still wouldn't admit he had a problem. He was now drinking plus taking some over-the-counter medication that, when combined with booze, produced a "high" similar to the anti-depressant drugs the shrink had prescribed. He was a mess. Some of his friends finally got him into another 5 day de-tox. Temporarily sober, he left and by the next afternoon was passed out from drinking again. That was when we became actively involved in trying to get him some help but he continued to deny there was any problem. His personality had totally changed ... truly out of his mind, he had lost his job and was living in a shed in a friend's backyard. The next Saturday he was transported to a hospital for yet another overnight de-tox after being found by the police on a beach with booze and pills. The hospital discharged him the next day and he immediately hit the booze and pills again. On Sunday I visited to check up on him and found him laying unconscious and having difficulty breathing. Called 911 and back to the hospital he went. One of the cops told me that I should call the hospital and request that he have a psychiatric evaluation following the de-tox period and before he was released. He explained the "involuntary commitment" procedure for rehab in a state facility (which happens to be run in state prisons). I did as he suggested. The doc who conducted the evaluation called me the next morning and said that based on her observation she could *not* recommend involuntary commitment because she determined he was not an immediate threat to himself or others. She and I had quite a go-around about that, but she was patient with me and explained how the law works in the case of a court ordered commitment to rehab. Meanwhile, we had located a private facility who could take him but he had to agree to go within 24 hours, otherwise the bed would go to the next person on the list. So, I lied to him. I told him that I had all the paperwork and recommendations required for a court ordered, 30 day involuntary commitment to a state re-hab facility. I explained it would be a mandatory 30 day stay at a minimum. "Or", I said, "You can go to a private facility voluntarily and you can leave anytime you want if you don't like it." It still took much convincing and we now only had about 10 hours left before he would lose his spot in the private facility. At one point it got pretty testy and I thought things would get physical. He continued to refuse to go, so I told him that I had no choice and would make the phone call to have the police pick him up for transport to the state facility. That's what it took to get him to finally agree to enter re-hab at the private facility. He still didn't go cheerfully, but he went and has been clean since. The fog in his head has cleared and he has reverted back to the decent, considerate person that we and others knew him to be. You definitely get the Good Scout award. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
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Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
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Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/13, 12:46 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:22:00 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:10 PM, wrote: Did someone other than you mention "drugging them and warehousing" them? What else do they do in cases of true mental illness? They can certainly find the right cocktail of drugs to make someone seem somewhat normal but that cocktail need to be constantly monitored and adjusted. Then you have the problem that the patient simply stops taking the drugs. The flip side of that are the people with addiction problems. We really have not come up with any long term plan to deal with those people. You can dry them out and release them but most are back abusing something pretty quickly. True mental illness? Interesting choice of words. Drugs, therapy, compassion, assistance can help many of those with "true mental illness" lead better lives. And many people with addiction problems can be helped out of their addictions and back to normal lives. You're too quick to discard your fellow human beings who are suffering. I guess I have just seen too many system failures. Your wife must just assume anyone who leaves her care is "cured". I doubt it. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/13, 12:48 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:23:26 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:12 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 08:33:56 -0500, BAR wrote: I question why a guy with a gun would stab someone. It sounds like the police are trying to relieve the father's consciousness because he actually killed his son. That is my guess too but we may never know. Uh-huh. Right. Of course. There is only one witness. I wasn't referring to the fact that only one of the two people in this tragedy is alive but to the assumption that the father shot and killed his son. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/13, 3:28 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 14:19:54 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:48 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:23:26 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:12 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 08:33:56 -0500, BAR wrote: I question why a guy with a gun would stab someone. It sounds like the police are trying to relieve the father's consciousness because he actually killed his son. That is my guess too but we may never know. Uh-huh. Right. Of course. There is only one witness. I wasn't referring to the fact that only one of the two people in this tragedy is alive but to the assumption that the father shot and killed his son. But he is the only one who knows for sure. I could understand if the cops did not really investigate this that closely. There is nothing to be gained by putting the gun in the dad's hand You mean, shooting someone who stabbed you multiple times is justification for standing your ground? -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/20/2013 3:28 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 14:19:54 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:48 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:23:26 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:12 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 08:33:56 -0500, BAR wrote: I question why a guy with a gun would stab someone. It sounds like the police are trying to relieve the father's consciousness because he actually killed his son. That is my guess too but we may never know. Uh-huh. Right. Of course. There is only one witness. I wasn't referring to the fact that only one of the two people in this tragedy is alive but to the assumption that the father shot and killed his son. But he is the only one who knows for sure. I could understand if the cops did not really investigate this that closely. There is nothing to be gained by putting the gun in the dad's hand The story as I heard it was that the kid shot himself while the father was down the road, going for assistance due to the knife wounds..... Don't remember where I heard it. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
In article , says...
On 11/20/13, 12:48 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:23:26 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:12 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 08:33:56 -0500, BAR wrote: I question why a guy with a gun would stab someone. It sounds like the police are trying to relieve the father's consciousness because he actually killed his son. That is my guess too but we may never know. Uh-huh. Right. Of course. There is only one witness. I wasn't referring to the fact that only one of the two people in this tragedy is alive but to the assumption that the father shot and killed his son. Like Greg said, there is only one witness. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
In article , says...
On 11/20/13, 3:28 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 14:19:54 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:48 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:23:26 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/20/13, 12:12 PM, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 08:33:56 -0500, BAR wrote: I question why a guy with a gun would stab someone. It sounds like the police are trying to relieve the father's consciousness because he actually killed his son. That is my guess too but we may never know. Uh-huh. Right. Of course. There is only one witness. I wasn't referring to the fact that only one of the two people in this tragedy is alive but to the assumption that the father shot and killed his son. But he is the only one who knows for sure. I could understand if the cops did not really investigate this that closely. There is nothing to be gained by putting the gun in the dad's hand You mean, shooting someone who stabbed you multiple times is justification for standing your ground? Yes. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
In article , says...
On 11/20/13, 12:08 AM, Califbill wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/19/13, 9:05 PM, Califbill wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/19/13, 8:09 PM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 11/19/13, 8:01 PM, Califbill wrote: "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/19/13, 4:39 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/19/2013 2:22 PM, wrote: On Tue, 19 Nov 2013 13:59:36 -0500, John H wrote: On Tue, 19 Nov 2013 13:52:02 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/19/13, 1:05 PM, wrote: On Tue, 19 Nov 2013 12:39:21 -0500, Hank© wrote: On 11/19/2013 11:35 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: Virginia State Senator Creigh Deeds hospitalized Virginia state senator Creigh Deeds was transported to a hospital Tuesday with serious injuries after allegedly being assaulted in his Bath County home earlier in the morning, according to NBC News. A second individual was found deceased inside the residence. Deeds, who was the 2009 Democratic nominee for governor, is being treated at the University of Virginia Medical Center in Charlottesville. State police plan to hold a news conference to update the public at noon today. What sort of trauma did Deeds suffer? Was the deceased Dem or Rep, Male or female, black white or other. By what means was the deceased dispatched? Cmon Mr. Dip**** reporter. Don't you remember the 5 Ws. It was in Harry's original note "An earlier news report stated the dead person was an adult son of Deeds and he had been shot." Sen Deeds was stabbed. So far CNN is not talking about any other people. The Virginia State Police had a news conference, and the spokesperson said the Creigh Deeds had been stabbed numerous times around the upper body and head. Deeds was conscious and talked to the police. His wounds were considered serious. The dead person, who was shot, is Deeds' son, an occasional student at the College of William and Mary, a first-rate college in Virginia, in Willamsburg. The police spokesperson said that at the time of the conference, they were not looking for suspects. That's about all the "meat" revealed. Damn shame the Deeds didn't have a gun handy. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Somebody had a gun because the son was shot. The only open question is if there was a 3d party involved. The cops said they are not looking for one. Assuming the police "are not looking for suspects", it sure sounds like domestic violence. The dead son had serious emotional issues and apparently was seeking treatment but there was no facility in his part of the state with an empty bed, or so the news reports. According to my wife, who knows about the "availability" of facilities for those who need a residential program, the lack of space is a common problem in this country almost everywhere, especially if you don't the funds or insurance to pay $2000+ a day for a private facility. It's not easy to find space for day treatment, either, or, in fact, for many kinds of treatment for mental/emotional problems sans cash or insurance that will cover it. Hey, this is America. I'm sure the Republican plan to provide health coverage to all Americans will take care of this, right? He was a state senator. If anyone could get a room at a residential facility, he would be top of the list. And since the kid is on the dad's insurance, sine he was under 26, the state would have paid. Oh. You're familiar with the availability of beds at psychiatric hospitals in that part of Virginia. Well, of course you are. CNN reports: The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported Tuesday that he had been given a mental health evaluation under an emergency custody order Monday, but was released because no psychiatric bed could be located across a wide area of western Virginia, Dennis Cropper, executive director of the Rockbridge Area Community Services Board, told the newspaper. And once again, Bilious...every day for you. He was a Senator. I bet they could have got a room! Seems as if the Dr.Dr.Dr.'s of Virginia did not think he was that bad. Makes those mental health professionals look a little incompetent. And again you demonstrate your ignorance. You demonstrate you bias. Again and again and again. What bias is that, Bill? There's a shortage of beds for psychiatric patients in Virginia generally, and especially in the more rural parts of the state. I have no idea what facilities might be available out in western rural Virginia. Your comment that because the young man's father is a state senator, a room would automatically be made available is just more of your uninformed nonsense. The reality is, many of the "facts" of this sad case are still unknown. Your screed against conservatives is falling apart. The facilities in and around where Deeds lived have responded that they were never contacted about the availability of a pshyc bed. Most said that they had beds available and would have accepted young Deeds if anyone has called and asked. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
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Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
On 11/22/13, 1:01 PM, wrote:
On Fri, 22 Nov 2013 11:55:47 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/22/13, 11:51 AM, wrote: On Fri, 22 Nov 2013 08:35:29 -0500, BAR wrote: Your screed against conservatives is falling apart. The facilities in and around where Deeds lived have responded that they were never contacted about the availability of a pshyc bed. Most said that they had beds available and would have accepted young Deeds if anyone has called and asked. I heard the same thing on CNN. Two hospitals within an hour's driver said they had a bed for him. We still have not heard anyone say the younger Deeds consented to being admitted. If he didn't want to go, they couldn't make him go, no matter how many beds were there. From what I see, most of these admissions come after a criminal court proceeding ... in lieu of prosecution or jail time. Think Trey Radel. If the younger Deeds had survived the gunshot, he would have been willing to check himself in for treatment. The fact that he had to be involuntarily taken in for assessment implies he was not a willing patient before the attack. Unfortunately the democratic principle of letting no tragedy go to waste is working here and they are milking this cow on all 4 tits Since none of us have seen the call list of the facility that did the preliminary intake on Deeds, we don't even know if the facility in Charlottesville should have been called. I did get a chuckle out of the claim that one of the facilities in a nearby town had someone competent to do a psych eval of Deeds or anyone else on 24-hour call. Maybe that is a problem with living out in the sticks. The fact remains that 2 hospitals within an hour's drive, did say they had a bed. Nobody has said the younger Deeds was willing to go. Without due process, they couldn't make him. Even then, it is usually jail or treatment. Charlottesville is closer to two hours away. I think the other hospital was in Staunton. Certainly the UVA hospital in Charlottesville would have been a good choice. I'm not sure I'd go to a hospital in Staunton for more than a paper cut. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
In article , says...
On 11/22/13, 11:51 AM, wrote: On Fri, 22 Nov 2013 08:35:29 -0500, BAR wrote: Your screed against conservatives is falling apart. The facilities in and around where Deeds lived have responded that they were never contacted about the availability of a pshyc bed. Most said that they had beds available and would have accepted young Deeds if anyone has called and asked. I heard the same thing on CNN. Two hospitals within an hour's driver said they had a bed for him. We still have not heard anyone say the younger Deeds consented to being admitted. If he didn't want to go, they couldn't make him go, no matter how many beds were there. From what I see, most of these admissions come after a criminal court proceeding ... in lieu of prosecution or jail time. Think Trey Radel. If the younger Deeds had survived the gunshot, he would have been willing to check himself in for treatment. The fact that he had to be involuntarily taken in for assessment implies he was not a willing patient before the attack. Unfortunately the democratic principle of letting no tragedy go to waste is working here and they are milking this cow on all 4 tits Since none of us have seen the call list of the facility that did the preliminary intake on Deeds, we don't even know if the facility in Charlottesville should have been called. I did get a chuckle out of the claim that one of the facilities in a nearby town had someone competent to do a psych eval of Deeds or anyone else on 24-hour call. You immediately went into your screed about how Virgina and Gov McDonald, mostly Gov McDonald, failed miseraby with respect to mental health care in Virginia. Your words ring hollow when placed against the facts and that beds were available, if only they had been contacted. Any complicity in this matter by Virgina or Gov McDonals is just you using Rahm Emanuel's don't let any tradgey go to west method of operation to use your broad brush. The elder Deeds was attacked by his son with a knife, the son is dead from from a gunshot wound that may or may not have been fired from a gun in the hands of the father. The story being pushed that the son killed himself with a gun after the father who was bloody and in very bad shape escaped the house is just that a stroy. It will be interesting to see the elder Deeds facial expression if and when he is asked directly about him pulling the trigger of the pistol that killed his son. My money is on the elder Deeds shooting the sone to prevent the son from killing him. |
Former Virginia Gubernatorial Candidate Assaulted in Home
In article , says...
On 11/22/13, 1:01 PM, wrote: On Fri, 22 Nov 2013 11:55:47 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 11/22/13, 11:51 AM, wrote: On Fri, 22 Nov 2013 08:35:29 -0500, BAR wrote: Your screed against conservatives is falling apart. The facilities in and around where Deeds lived have responded that they were never contacted about the availability of a pshyc bed. Most said that they had beds available and would have accepted young Deeds if anyone has called and asked. I heard the same thing on CNN. Two hospitals within an hour's driver said they had a bed for him. We still have not heard anyone say the younger Deeds consented to being admitted. If he didn't want to go, they couldn't make him go, no matter how many beds were there. From what I see, most of these admissions come after a criminal court proceeding ... in lieu of prosecution or jail time. Think Trey Radel. If the younger Deeds had survived the gunshot, he would have been willing to check himself in for treatment. The fact that he had to be involuntarily taken in for assessment implies he was not a willing patient before the attack. Unfortunately the democratic principle of letting no tragedy go to waste is working here and they are milking this cow on all 4 tits Since none of us have seen the call list of the facility that did the preliminary intake on Deeds, we don't even know if the facility in Charlottesville should have been called. I did get a chuckle out of the claim that one of the facilities in a nearby town had someone competent to do a psych eval of Deeds or anyone else on 24-hour call. Maybe that is a problem with living out in the sticks. The fact remains that 2 hospitals within an hour's drive, did say they had a bed. Nobody has said the younger Deeds was willing to go. Without due process, they couldn't make him. Even then, it is usually jail or treatment. Charlottesville is closer to two hours away. I think the other hospital was in Staunton. Certainly the UVA hospital in Charlottesville would have been a good choice. I'm not sure I'd go to a hospital in Staunton for more than a paper cut. The issue is not how far or what facility was better the issue is that these instituitons were not contacted and they should have been on the list to contact. When my wife went into pre-term labor they called all level 3 NICU's in the area, MD and VA, and she was going to be sent to the first one that responded that they had a NICU bed available. |
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