In Re Detention Of M.p.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 28, 2025
Docket86665-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Detention Of M.p. (In Re Detention Of M.p.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Detention Of M.p., (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

In the Matter of the Detention of No. 86665-6-I

M.P., UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

BOWMAN, A.C.J. — M.P. challenges the trial court’s order committing him

to 14 days of involuntary detention and treatment for his mental health disorder.

He claims that the record lacks sufficient evidence that he posed a likelihood of

serious harm to others and was gravely disabled. We disagree, and affirm.

FACTS

M.P. is a 60-year-old man from Wisconsin. He also co-owns a business in

Colorado with Paul Myers. M.P. has a history of major depressive disorder and

possible bipolar disorder and is under the care of a psychiatrist in his home state.

On April 28, 2024, Seattle police officers transported M.P. to the

emergency department at Swedish First Hill after he was trespassed from a

hotel. During his evaluation in the emergency department, M.P. exhibited

“mania, intermittent agitation, aggression, grandiosity, poor impulse control and

delusional thought processes.” Swedish detained M.P. for 120 hours of

psychiatric evaluation and then transferred him to Fairfax Hospital for inpatient

behavioral health services. No. 86665-6-I/2

On May 3, 2024, Fairfax petitioned for 14 days of involuntary treatment,

asserting that M.P. suffered from a mental disorder that presented a likelihood of

serious harm to others and that he was gravely disabled. According to the

petition, M.P. “continued to evidence symptoms of behavioral health disorder by

irritability, labile mood, grandiosity, hyperverbal, agitation, posturing at peers, and

limited insight into behavior leading to hospitalization,” and he was “showing an

increased loss of cognitive and volitional functioning, poor insight regarding

symptoms and it would be essential for further hospitalization.”

The trial court held a two-day commitment hearing on May 3 and 6, 2024.

In support of the petition, it heard testimony from M.P.’s sister Katherine Eaton,

his nephew Michael Eaton, his coworker Charles Styles, and licensed mental

health counselor Bryan Hayden. M.P. testified in opposition to his detention for

treatment.

Katherine1 described her brother as “[k]ind, considerate, fun, upbeat,” and

a “real people person” at his “baseline” functioning. But beginning in January

2024, Katherine observed that he was quick to anger, judgmental, and very

critical. On April 22, 2024, she travelled from Wisconsin to Seattle because she

learned that SeaTac police arrested M.P. According to Katherine, M.P. told her

that officers arrested him for trespassing at the airport, but that “he believed it to

be bogus.” After jail, SeaTac police took M.P. to a crisis center. When the crisis

center released him, M.P. could not determine which bus to ride to his nephew

1 For clarity, we refer to Katherine Eaton and her son, Michael Eaton, by their first names and intend no disrespect by doing so.

2 No. 86665-6-I/3

Michael’s house in Seattle, and he “walked all night.” M.P. told Katherine that

someone mugged him and took his phone and wallet.

Katherine and Michael drove M.P. to Costco so he could replace his

phone and buy clothing and food. While buying the new phone, M.P. became

angry with Katherine, “got within an inch of [her] face,” and started “screaming” at

her. Katherine testified, “I guess I wouldn’t say right at that second that I thought

he was going to be violent, but in hindsight, I’m very — I’m afraid. And my son at

that point did call 9-1-1.” Katherine elaborated, “I didn’t know what was going to

happen next and I didn’t know how to make sure he didn’t get himself in more

trouble.” When asked if she was afraid for her own safety, Katherine responded,

“I’ve never thought of him as violent ever. So, it’s hard to — but I was afraid that

might have been the next step.”

Michael also provided his version of the events at Costco with his mom

and M.P. According to Michael, M.P. “exploded” at Katherine. “He got right in

her face. He started screaming at the top of his lungs. He berated her in a way I

have never seen anyone do since like childhood. You know, he was immensely

[verbally] abusive.” Michael was “extremely worried” that M.P. might be capable

of physical violence. Michael testified, “I did not want to have him anywhere in or

around my house and I didn’t want him around my mother after that,” and, “I was

terrified of the man. You know, I — I was completely scared of my uncle.”

Michael testified that he met M.P. for dinner at a Seattle restaurant around

the same time. Michael asked M.P. why he had a black eye and a brace on his

wrist, and M.P. said that he had been in a fight. Michael had never known his

uncle to fight, so the behavior was out of character for M.P. and “really alarming.”

3 No. 86665-6-I/4

During dinner, M.P. engaged Michael in a “loud” and “graphic” sexual

conversation, “which seemed a little strange.”

M.P. then turned the conversation to his business partner, Myers, and told

Michael, “ ‘I’m gonna kill Paul.’ ” Michael testified, “I have never seen the man so

angry. I have never seen him get that — there was just this look on his face that

was terrifying.” When asked if M.P. would be welcome at his house “in his

current state,” Michael replied, “No, no. I would not let that man in my house

right now.”

Styles is an employee of M.P.’s company in Colorado. He described an

incident that happened in March 2024 when M.P. visited the Colorado office.

Styles testified that M.P met with a coworker named “Lizzie” and that “[t]hings got

very heated in the office. [M.P.] was behaving very erratically, raising his voice,

shouting, [and] yelling.” M.P. then grabbed Lizzie’s shoulder, turned her around,

and started screaming at her. Styles physically inserted himself between M.P.

and Lizzie to “diffuse the situation.” M.P. then screamed at Styles, who

threatened to call the police if M.P. “did not get away from [him].”

Later that evening, Styles left the office and was walking down the road

when M.P. drove by him going the opposite direction. According to Styles, when

M.P. passed him,

I heard him hit his brakes, and I looked back, he was doing a U- turn, so I kept walking. He came flying back up the road. I heard the car approaching very quickly from behind . . . . .... . . . When he drove up, I could hear the car was right behind me, I turned around and jumped to my right. [M.P.] had swerved and then was beginning another U-turn. On that U-turn, after I had jumped to my right, he crashed into the snowbank on the median. Was obviously out of control. He then reversed, came up right

4 No. 86665-6-I/5

alongside me. I was continuing to walk at this point, he screamed something out of the car. I could not tell what he said. And then peeled off and I kept walking.

Styles elaborated, “I felt like I was in danger, so I got out of the way. He was

approaching quickly. I didn’t want to turn around and look at him, so I jumped to

the right. His car was very close to me.” Styles was “terrified” and “felt like [he]

was being intimidated with a vehicle.”

Styles testified that soon after, the Colorado office obtained a permanent

restraining order against M.P. because the staff were “confused” and “afraid” of

him.2 And while the temporary restraining order was in place, M.P. violated the

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