Shootings expose cracks in U.S. system

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Kevin Earley, 33, holds a bottle of his antipsychotic medication as he stands next to a medicine cabinet which has an old photo taped to it, in the bathroom of his Vienna, Va., apartment that he shares with a roommate. Of the photo, Earley says, “It reminds me to take my medicine every day and reminds me of where I have been and what I have been through.” (AP)
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A sly suggestion from a police officer led Kevin Earley’s father to lie and say the young man was violent so that he would get treatment. Earley, then 23, was arrested after breaking into someone else’s house to take a bubble bath.

“He said, ‘Unless you tell them your son threatened to kill you, they won’t admit him and we’ll take him to jail, and you don’t want that,’” said Pete Earley, an author in Fairfax, Va., who has written about his son’s experience in the mental health care system.

Kevin Earley was seeing secret messages all around him, but his father never heard his clearly psychotic son threaten himself or others.

“I went in and I lied. And that got him into the hospital,” Pete Earley said.

But just getting patients diagnosed or enrolled in treatment often isn’t enough. Virginia Tech gunman Seung-Hui Cho was ordered into outpatient treatment before he killed 32 people in 2007.

This summer, prosecutors say, James Holmes killed 12 people at a midnight premiere of a new Batman movie in Colorado. His attorneys say he had an undisclosed mental illness, and his psychiatrist tried to report him to a campus behavioral and security committee.

Experts say it can take years before patients agree to stick with a prescribed treatment. Elyn Saks, a law professor at the University of Southern California, has schizophrenia and, without medication, starts to believe she can kill hundreds of thousands of people with her thoughts. Until the mid-1990s, when she was in her 40s, Saks tried periodically to skip her drugs.

“I felt so ashamed,” said Saks, a MacArthur Foundation “genius grant” winner for her contributions to mental health law. “It’s an internalized stigma. I wanted to be whole, I wanted to be well. Each time I tried to get off medication, I did it with great gusto and failed miserably.” Now, she takes her pills. “Frankly, I’m sorry I wasn’t smarter sooner.”

Earley initially didn’t stick with treatment after his father lied to get him into a hospital. He became violent — he was shot with a Taser by a police officer at one point — and was hospitalized five times before he realized he couldn’t live without his medication.

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