The Go-to-Jail Card; For people of color, mental illness often means incarceration.
Originally published in the Los Angeles Times January 9, 2005 Sunday
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times
By: EMORY HOLMES II
When
Nancy Carter and four other professional women began meeting five years
ago to vent their frustrations about the mental health issues
devastating their families, they discovered three things in common:
Each of their mentally ill loved ones was an African American
in their 20s at the time of their psychotic break, each had been
well-educated and upwardly mobile, and each had landed not in a
hospital but in a jail facility, notably the Twin Towers, the downtown
branch of the Los Angeles County Jail. As a result, Carter, owner of a
firm that supplies audiences for television programs, founded an
Inglewood chapter of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill along
with novelist Bebe Moore Campbell, pharmacist Benita Council, school
administrator Jo Helen Graham and physician Lynn Goodloe. We spoke with
Carter about her quest to address a local crisis.
What motivated you and your co-founders to start a NAMI chapter in Inglewood?
The perception in all communities is that black people
deserve to go to jail, they're all criminals, they all use drugs. This
was not the case with our young people. Our young people were in
college, had careers, they all had lives. They would never have
encountered the criminal justice system had it not been for their
mental illnesses.
You call the Twin Towers in downtown L.A. the nation's largest de facto mental health facility. What does that mean?
For
the year 2004, statistics from the Los Angeles County Department of
Mental Health list 50,534 forensic episodes at the Twin Towers. A
"forensic episode" means clients coming through the Twin Towers who
have some form of mental illness. The tragedy is not so much the huge
number, but the increase from the year 2000. In 2000 that figure was
33,805, so this year represents a 49% increase in four years. That's
ridiculous. African Americans top the list with
almost 41%, Latinos come in second at almost 24%. So 65% of the mental
health patients incarcerated in the Twin Towers were people of color.
What accounts for the increase?
Thirty
years ago we closed state hospitals, and there was a promise from state
government that more community clinics would be opened. That promise
was never realized. As a result, everyone poured out of state hospitals
onto the streets. Homeless people commit petty crimes, mentally ill
people traditionally get in trouble with law enforcement, and instead
of being sent to treatment facilities that no longer exist they end up
being sent to jail.
Is the problem worse for people of color?
I don't think that mental health problems have been more serious for African Americans
or minorities than for any other population, we just seem to be
punished more severely than any other population. If you are a
Caucasian and you are walking down Rodeo Drive naked and talking to
yourself, you will be picked up by the Beverly Hills Police Department
and taken to Cedars-Sinai or UCLA. If you are a person of color and you
are walking down Crenshaw naked and talking with yourself, you get the
"Go Straight to Jail" card.
What would address this problem in a meaningful way?
We
need more housing for the mentally ill, and more facilities where
people can be transitioned from arrest to treatment. We seriously need
a "jail diversion" program placing more mental health court workers in
court who can work with public defenders and district attorneys to
divert people from going through the jail process.
Tell us about your own work on the issue.
We're
not going to change the system overnight, but since so many of our
family members end up over at the Twin Towers jail, we went to
Sheriff's Cmdr. Marc Klugman and sat down and said, "Can we do
something to change the culture at the jail?" We had very successful
meetings with him and accomplished several things: First, we now have
on the Sheriff's Department website a link that will take you to a
document walking you through steps to take if your family member has
been arrested. The second thing was a medication form. We now have a
designated fax line, a form that people can pick up in the lobby or
download off their computers on who their family members are, who to
contact, what medication they are on, who the doctor was, and they can
get that into the jail. Third was convincing the folks at the jail to
allow us to start a training program for the deputies.
What drives you to juggle your career with a volunteer commitment that can amount to 40-plus hours a week?
I
believe in love and that as human beings we are obligated to treat
others as we would want to be treated. Suffering with a loved one with
mental illness has completely changed me. Mental illness is a marathon,
not a sprint. No one can bear the burden alone. It really does take
"the village"--plus.