Bruce
Williams, seen in jail, is a symbol of a system so gutted it fails to
protect the public from the dangerously mentally ill.
A riveting multi-part investigation in the Virginian-Pilot
about how an increasingly broken mental health care system in the U.S.
fails to protect the public from people too sick to not be
institutionalized. People like convicted killer Bruce Williams, a
diagnosed schizophrenic who grew up in an extremely violent alcoholic
home. He hears voices in his head instructing him to kill people, and
with multiple victims over the course of his life, he has. Through
Williams' story, we are able to understand more about how and why the
system is so broken.
The vast majority of the mentally ill are not like Williams – even those with schizophrenia, probably the most volatile disorder. They’re a bigger risk to themselves than to anyone else, shadowed by a spectre known as suicidal ideation, or SI for short."There’s little appetite for reviving the institutions," the report continues, "Even though they’re the only places someone like Williams can get the intensive treatment – not to mention the level of confinement – he obviously needs."
Williams’ medical records are peppered with “SI,” plus a chilling addition: “HI” – homicidal ideation. In between his two murders, he says, he asked to be sent to an institution. No one committed him, despite his history.
Here and across the country, there’s been a philosophical and legal shift in mental health care. Home-based treatment is in, monitored by social workers who try to mainstream every patient. State institutions are out, reduced to skeletons with few beds.
Read the entirety of the profile: PART 1, "Can't hold him." PART 2, "Can't fix him." PART 3, Can't stop him.
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