In Re M.p. v. State Of Washington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 15, 2014
Docket70421-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re M.p. v. State Of Washington (In Re M.p. v. State Of Washington) 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 M.p. v. State Of Washington, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Detention of DIVISION ONE

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M.P. No. 70421-4-1 C3 H X"

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Dwyer, J. — M.P. appeals from a 14-day involuntary commitment order, § 7~C "c>

contending that the trial court erred by concluding that he posed a substantial risk of harm to others.1 However, this conclusion was supported by the facts as

found by the trial judge. Accordingly, we affirm.

I

M.P. was detained on May 3, 2013. Shortly thereafter, the State filed a

petition in King County Superior Court, seeking that he be detained for up to 14 days for mental health treatment. The State's petition was heard on May 8 by Judge James Cayce. The court heard testimony from four witnesses. It deemed the testimony of the State's three witnesses—Todd Ryburn, Uy Tu, and Dr.

Janice Edwards—credible.

First, the State offered testimony from Todd Ryburn, a case manager at

the Host Program, which provides services to people who are vulnerable,

1 See RCW 71.05.240(3); RCW 71.05.020(25). No. 70421-4-1/2

homeless, and, usually, experiencing some form of crisis. Ryburn had worked

with M.P. since February 2012 and had assisted M.P. with obtaining housing at

Aurora House—a supportive housing project. Ryburn stated that, although M.P.

was always "intense," until recently he had been polite and pleasant. According

to Ryburn, M.P.'s aberrant behavior began when he made two telephone calls to

Ryburn. During the first call, M.P. was "intense" but did not seem angry. He was

able to express his concern that people were entering his room and that

someone was making his room smell so bad that he could not sleep. However,

during the second call, M.P. was so irate and uncharacteristically upset that

Ryburn terminated the conversation. M.P. was difficult to understand in that call, but he expressed some of the same concerns as in the first call and added that

he believed that people were colluding against him.

On May 3, 2013, Ryburn went to Aurora House to visit M.P. The meeting

"went very poorly." M.P.'s demeanor, which Ryburn described as "loud and intense and irrational," caused Ryburn concern. Ryburn wanted to meet with

M.P. "in the open" because he did not feel safe. Based upon M.P.'s posture and presence, Ryburn felt that M.P. might "lash out" at him. M.P. refused the request and expressed a desire to meet in private. Ryburn eventually agreed to meet

with M.P. in a conference room, but he required that the door remain open.

Before the meeting began, M.P. became upset with Ryburn's insistence that the

door remain open. He became fixated on the identity of Ryburn's boss, and

expressed a beliefthat Ryburn was now among the group of people who were

colluding against him. Ryburn stated several times during his testimony that

-2- No. 70421-4-1/3

M.P.'s behavior made him feel unsafe. Ryburn stated that, prior to this event, he

had never felt unsafe around M.P. Indeed, Ryburn testified, he had never

previously experienced any problems meeting with M.P. in private. In fact,

Ryburn had met with M.P. at M.P.'s apartment the previous month and the

interaction had been pleasant. However, on May 3, as Ryburn detailed in his

testimony, M.P. behaved very differently.

Ryburn terminated the meeting due to M.P.'s behavior and went into the

front office of Aurora House, where he stood behind a counter. M.P. followed

Ryburn and refused to back away. Ryburn responded by moving into a back room of the office, where he closed the door and the blinds. Although M.P.

briefly "disappeared," he returned and began yelling and knocking hard on the closed door. This made Ryburn feel unsafe. With the assistance of Lisa Hilton,

the Aurora House housing manager, Ryburn left the room through a back door. Ryburn remained at Aurora House until the designated mental health professionals and police officers arrived. Prior to their arrival, Ryburn watched video footage of M.P. and another client in an altercation. The video, according to Ryburn, showed M.P. and the other individual posturing and preparing to fight one another. While M.P. was being placed on an ambulance stretcher, he told

the police that he was "going to come back and blow away the person in room 322" and then demanded that the police be sure they "heard" him. M.P.'s threat

made Ryburn concerned for the safety of the Aurora House residents— particularly the resident in room 322. Ryburn was aware that M.P. had recently been charged with assault, which added to Ryburn's concern for his own safety. -3- No. 70421-4-1/4

Next, the State offered testimony from Uy Tu, a clinical support specialist

at Aurora House. Tu's primary responsibility was to assist with the concerns of

Aurora House residents. He explained that when M.P. first moved in,

approximately a month prior to his hospitalization, he was a good resident who

was polite and had no reported issues. This changed in the two to three weeks

prior to his detention. M.P. menaced Tu three times in the three weeks prior to

his detention.

Tu testified that M.P. began insisting that people were entering his

apartment in order to "make a fool of him" and "mess" with him. M.P. insisted

that things in his apartment had been tampered with, even though he lived alone

and despite the fact that no one other than staff members had access to his

apartment. M.P. also told Tu that his neighbor was responsible for causing a strong odor, which smelled like crack or heroin, to be present in his apartment.

Tu testified that M.P. exhibited menacing behavior during this interaction,

including leaning toward Tu and staring him down, as if forcing Tu to focus his

gaze on M.P. Based upon M.P.'s concerns, Tu went to M.P.'s floor and unit to

investigate, but did not smell anything unusual.

Sometime thereafter, Tu and Hilton met with M.P. to address his

concerns. Prior to the meeting, and while Tu and Hilton were speaking privately,

M.P. stared at Tu through the window in a manner that caused Tu to feel unsafe.

Once the meeting began, M.P. demanded to know why Hilton—who he had, in

fact, requested attend the meeting—was present. When Tu explained that Hilton

was present because he did not feel safe being alone with M.P., M.P. became

-4- No. 70421-4-1/5

even more angry and menacing. The menacing behavior was much the same as

before—leaning toward Tu and staring him down. Although M.P. had just

requested that his stove be repaired, after he was informed that—due to safety

concerns—two staff members, rather than one, would be sent, he refused to

permit them to enter his unit. Tu testified that he felt unsafe due to M.P.'s angry

and menacing demeanor.

Finally, the State offered testimony from Janice Edwards, Ph.D. Dr.

Edwards introduced portions of M.P.'s medical record that documented behavior

that was consistent with that which was described by Ryburn and Tu. While

speaking with a psychiatrist on the day that he was detained, M.P. displayed no

understanding of the reasons for which he was in the hospital. He also exhibited

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