Announcing Assistance to the Incarcerated Mentally Ill ("AIMI")

uploaded by duo January 15, 2008 at 12:42 am
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Announcing Assistance to the Incarcerated Mentally Ill ("AIMI") by duo

Personal tragedy sometimes gives rise to important new legislation, organizations, and programs promoting social change that benefits Americans, like the Amber Alert, <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />America’s Most Wanted, and others.  In response to the secret incarceration and wrongful death of my brother, Larry Morris Neal, my family is establishing AIMI, an organization to advocate for the decriminalization of mental illness in America and increased availability of inpatient psychiatric services.  http://wrongfuldeathoflarryneal.com


<?xml:namespace prefix = v ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:vml" /><?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><?xml:namespace prefix = w ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:word" />Larry was a mentally ill heart patient who was secretly arrested in mid-July 2003 and incarcerated until his fatal heart attack on August 1, 2003.  For the 18 days of Larry's detainment on some misdemeanor connected with his mental disability, his family and social worker searched for Larry as a missing person.  The jail falsely and repeatedly reported that neither Larry nor anyone meeting his physical description was detained in that facility.  As an unidentified inmate, Larry presumably did not receive his vital prescription heart and psychiatric drugs.  Sadly, Larry’s story is not unique; the mentally ill in America suffer many hardships resulting from inadequate or no care.  Thousands of chronically mentally ill Americans who cannot orient themselves into society are jailed, homeless, or warehoused in substandard hospitals where many die each year. 


Presently, only the mentally ill who seek and/or willingly accept psychiatric treatment are serviced or hospitalized, unless or until patients prove to be a danger to society.  People who are too sick to recognize their own psychosis are left largely to their own devices.  Here is a secret we learned during years of visiting Larry in mental institutions and having met many sick patients:  Many acutely mentally ill people simply do not know/believe/accept that they are sick.  Ironically, the movement to deinstitutionalize the mentally ill in America was led for the most part by ex‑psychiatric patients who had themselves been institutionalized.  Rejoining society undoubtedly worked well for those who were capable of the self-discipline and presence of mind to launch this movement, many of whom went on to pursue psychiatric careers, themselves.  Many people who were at one time institutionalized may have been suffering from nervous breakdowns or other highly treatable ailments.  However, deinstitutionalization was a tragic development for people like Larry and thousands of other sick people presently incarcerated, having only swapped hospital care for jail cells.  That is why this mental health system based on voluntary treatment has failed and our humanitarian decision of the 1970’s to deinstitutionalize the mentally ill has resulted in a growing prison population of mentally ill detainees.  How humane is jailing sick people?  Other side-effects of our “patients in charge” mental health system are overcrowded jails, an overtaxed criminal justice system, increasing homelessness, and a more dangerous society.  Both the Texas woman who drowned her children and the Virginia Tech student who killed 32 people during a violent rampage were mental patients who needed better treatment and control.  We must free our nation’s law enforcement to get back to the business of fighting crime rather than acting as psychiatric caretakers.


Americans generously give to organizations that address social ills partly caused by inadequate care for the chronically mentally ill, like homelessness.  Prayerfully consider giving to help establish AIMI, an organization that will address one major cause of these problems – inadequate care for the acutely mentally ill.  We believe chronically mentally ill people should be hospitalized, not jailed for their disabilities.  Please help “the least of these, His brethren.”  See the CONTACT US tab for details on how to contribute and otherwise support our efforts at http://wrongfuldeathoflarryneal.com.


Assistance to the Incarcerated Mentally Ill
P.O. Box 7222
Atlanta, GA  30357

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Title: Announcing Assistance to the Incarcerated Mentally Ill ("AIMI")
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Created: Tue, 01/15/2008 - 12:42am
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