View Full Version : To stand trial, defendants can be medicated by force


mabear
06-17-2003, 07:37 PM
To stand trial, defendants can be medicated by force

WASHINGTON - The US government can forcibly administer mind-altering drugs to render criminal defendants competent to stand trial, but only under certain limited circumstances.

In a case with potential implications for those opposed to conventional medical care, the US Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 Monday that the government's interest in bringing defendants to trial outweighs an individual's decision to be free from forced medication.

The high court declined to find that individuals possess a fundamental right under the Constitution to reject forced medication. The decision doesn't discuss this issue. Instead, the majority concluded that the government has the power to take action when a defendant is "mentally ill" and facing "serious criminal charges."

In the majority opinion, Justice Stephen Breyer established a new legal standard that substantially narrows the permissible circumstances for such government action. "This standard will permit involuntary administration of drugs solely for trial competence purposes in certain instances. But those instances may be rare," Justice Breyer writes.

The high court outlined four conditions that a court must meet to approve the forcible medication of a defendant. First, the court must find important government interests are at stake. Second, it must conclude that involuntary medication will significantly further those government interests. Third, the court must conclude that involuntary medication is necessary to further those interests. And fourth, it must conclude that administration of the drugs is medically appropriate in light of the patient's best medical interests.

The justices also noted that a court must find administration of the drugs is substantially unlikely to have side effects that will significantly interfere with a defendant's ability to assist in his or her defense at trial.

Breyer was joined in the majority opinion by Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices John Paul Stevens, Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

The decision comes in the case of a St. Louis dentist, Charles Sell. He was charged in 1997 with running a Medicaid insurance fraud scheme. Dr. Sell has been diagnosed with a mental illness, called delusional disorder - persecutory type, which has rendered him incompetent to stand trial.

Medical experts hired by the government say that certain antipsychotic drugs could restore Sell's competence and permit him to stand trial. But Sell's lawyer says Sell has had bad experiences with side effects from such drugs and refuses to take them.

The appeals court in Sell's case ordered that he be forcibly medicated.

The Supreme Court's decision vacates that ruling and remands the case back to the lower courts to apply the new, tougher standards.

Sell's lawyer, Barry Short, says the decision is a clear victory. "It is going to be much more difficult for the government to ever be able to force medication on somebody who doesn't want it," he says.

Sell's case is unique in that the court determined he was legally incompetent to stand trial but he was nonetheless competent to make his own medical decisions. In addition, the appeals court ruled that he did not pose a danger to himself and others.

In the high court's ruling, the justices say that assuming that Sell is not dangerous, the appeals court was wrong to approve forced medication solely to render Sell competent to stand trial.

The Sell case had raised concerns by civil libertarians who were worried about the possible broader implications of the case. Some questioned whether the same legal approach might be used to justify requirements by a local school board that unruly children take Ritalin as a condition of attending public school. Others questioned whether criminal defendants have a First Amendment right to think and act in a certain way without being subjected to the influence of antipsychotic drugs.

The high court dodged these broader issues by writing a narrow decision.

In a dissent, Justice Antonin Scalia says he is concerned that the decision may create grounds for certain defendants to delay their trials. "Monday's narrow holding will allow criminal defendants in petitioner's position to engage in opportunistic behavior," he writes. "They can, for example, voluntarily take their medication until halfway through trial, then abruptly refuse and demand an appeal."

It remains unclear what will happen to Sell, but one outcome is that he could be ordered released as a result of the long time he has spent in pretrial custody. Sell has been held for almost six years. He has already been in federal custody longer than the sentence he would have received under federal-sentencing guidelines if convicted of the fraud charges.

mrsdragoness
06-17-2003, 08:38 PM
I have mixed emotions about this.

ANYONE who is judged by doctors then the courts to be a danger to themselves or others can be ordered to be medicated.

I worked in state run psychiatric hospitals in direct care more than half of the 23 years I worked for the State of Michigan.

If someone is not aware of his mental well being, is it wrong to "help" him? I've taken care of people who killed their loved ones because of their mental illness. Once on medication, they often struggled with the horror of what they did and spent many years trying to overcome the tragedy. Many of these people "fell thru the cracks" of the mental health system and these tragedies could have been avoided if someone would have gotten them some help earlier.

I've also see people "fake" mental illness to avoid jail/prison. Sometimes it backfires on them and they end up spending more time in the mental health system than they would have if they had just done their time!!!

What is the right and wrong of this? Where is the line drawn between forcing people to take meds and just letting them go when they more than likely will hurt themselves or someone else?

mrs. d

MrCoffee
06-21-2003, 03:12 AM
Boy, that's a tough question. I really think the only reason someone should be forcibly medicated, is when a crime is involved and then to restore competency to stand trial.

One can take a look at the Westerfield case, where the individual is undergoing forced treatement in order to stand trial. The families of the victems will tell you that they have waited too long for closure in the situation. Unfortunately, Westerfield will very likely face the death penalty if convicted.

The moral of the story? It's because we all have to have some accountability for our actions. It does not matter whether the situation involves mental illness or not, the punishment has to fit the crime.

Treatment for mental health issues must be handled in a hospitable climate, and a prison is not appropriate for that. However, a criminal should not be allowed to live in the same quarters as vulnerable adults either. So the only real option for them would be treatment while in prison, under appropriate conditions.

People who are in residence at a psychiatric facilility MUST abide by the same laws as anybody else, even if they are under civil comittment! If they commit a crime while in the facility, they should be forcibly removed from that facility and taken into DOC custody. No ifs, no ands, no buts, and no excuses or options here. However, their treatment should continue while in custody.

Better treatment and better facilities within the correctional system to handle psychiatric cases is a solution worth implementing. It would serve justice, and it would also afford treatment for those who need it. At the same time, it would allow those who are law-abiding to recieve their treatment without having to worry about their own safety.

MrCoffee