In Re The Detention Of Alma Mcgowan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 14, 2016
Docket74301-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Detention Of Alma Mcgowan (In Re The Detention Of Alma Mcgowan) 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 The Detention Of Alma Mcgowan, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Detention of ' ^ No. 74301-5-1 3 A.M. DIVISION ONE

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

FILED: November 14, 2016

Appelwick, J. — A.M. seeks reversal of an order remanding her for an additional

90 days of inpatient treatment. She allegies that the State failed to prove by clear,

cogent, and convincing evidence that A.M. presented a substantial risk of physical harm

to others as a result of a mental disorder as required by RCW 71.05.280(1). We

reverse.

FACTS

A.M. has been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. On August 31, 2015,

Designated Mental Health Professional Rodney Pryor filed a petition to place A.M. on

an involuntary treatment hold, and A.M. entered into an agreed order committing her to

inpatient treatment for a period not to exceed 14 days. The initial petition was based on

evidence that A.M. had been found unconscious in a gas station bathroom and when

paramedics tried to lift her onto the gurney, she awoke and became combative and No. 74301-5-1/2

aggressive. She was restrained at St. Francis Hospital where she remained combative,

attempted to remove the restraints, attempted to punch, kick, and scratch staff

members, and she refused to engage in an evaluation.

A.M. was transferred to Fairfax Hospital, and on September 11, 2015, Fairfax

petitioned for an additional 90 day more restrictive involuntary treatment (Petition). The

Petition alleged that A.M.:

has threatened, attempted, or inflicted physical harm upon the person of another or him/herself, or substantial damage upon the property of another after having been taken into custody for evaluation and treatment, and as a result of a mental disorder presented a likelihood of serious harm;

and/or:

. . . was taken into custody as a result of conduct in which he/she attempted or inflicted physical harm upon the person of another or him/herself, or substantial damage upon the property of others, and continues to present, as a result of mental disorder, a likelihood of serious harm;

. . . was gravely disabled.

On October 13, 2015, the trial court held a hearing on the Petition. The State

presented the testimony of Dr. Cynthia Mason, a clinical psychologist from Fairfax

Hospital. A.M. refused to be evaluated so Dr. Mason based her evaluation on

discussions with A.M.'s treatment team, review of A.M.'s chart, and personal

observations of A.M. in the unit and in court. She testified that when she tried to speak

with A.M. the day before the hearing, A.M. used pressured, hyperverbal speech, made

rambling statements about being a federal marshal and needing to leave the hospital. No. 74301-5-1/3

She claimed that the hospital staff were terrorists and her life was in danger the longer

she stayed there.

At this point, A.M. had been hospitalized at Fairfax for about six weeks, and Dr.

Mason read notes from A.M.'s medical chart into the record. At her initial psychiatric

evaluation on September 4, 2015, A.M. stated, "I want out of your torture chamber," and

"I won't be taking any medication so leave me alone. If you force me, I will probably kill

you, so leave me alone." A.M. "physically postured at Fairfax staff' and refused to

engage with the nurses, participate in therapeutic discussion or answer any assessment

questions.

The daily nursing note from September 20 stated that A.M. was guarded and

irritable, angry, agitated, hyperverbal, isolative, pacing, and withdrawn. She denied

having any psychological problems and said she had cancer. On September 24, when

asked why she was in the hospital, she reported that her gallbladder ruptured and she

said she would "have to subpoena the Federal Marshals, the Navy, the CIA, and [the]

FBI." On September 25, her case manager noted that A.M.'s thought process was

grandiose with delusions, and her behavior was agitated, aggressive, defiant,

hyperverbal, oppositional, and isolative. She refused services and wanted to leave the

country and go to China because no one was recognizing her for her federal marshal

work. A progress note from October 4 indicates that A.M. was restless and fidgety and

having auditory and visual hallucinations; she claimed that "60,000 . . . people can see.

People with ear chromosomes can't see it."

On October 7, A.M. made threatening statements such as, "You moron, get the

fuck out of my room now, otherwise, I will kick your ass." She refused to meet with her No. 74301-5-1/4

case manager, said staff was "violently offensive" for talking to her while she was in bed

and told them to "[l]eave me the hell alone. You go deal with a sexual harassment," and

said she wanted a taxi called so she could leave. On October 10, she told a nurse she

had been admitted to the hospital due to her gallbladder, but she had recovered and

would not take medications upon discharge. She told staff to leave her alone, and she

would not take any medications when she left because she did not need them.

On October 11, A.M. told a nurse, "I don't like you. Get the fuck out of here" and

refused psychiatric assessment saying, "You are a terrorist, Leave me the fuck alone."

On October 12, she insisted that she was being kept illegally, that all of the staff were

not Americans but "a bunch of African and Middle Eastern terrorists." She stated, "I

don't like any of you guys. I am trained to kill and I can see you guys are trying to bring

your terrorists all over here. I will kill you people. ... I will [d]ie for America."

Dr. Mason opined that A.M. presented a substantial risk of physical harm to

others as a result of her mental disorder, paranoid schizophrenia. She stated that A.M.

presented a likelihood of serious harm to others based on the fact that she was making

threats to staff as recently as October 12, the day before the hearing. She expressed

concern that A.M. might anger the wrong person, instigate an argument, and have a

physical altercation as either the perpetrator or the victim as a result of her behavior.

She noted that A.M. had no insight into her need for mental health treatment and should

not be released to a less restrictive environment because she was unwilling to take her

medications outside of the hospital and was not sufficiently cognitively aware to make or

keep appointments. No. 74301-5-1/5

Dr. Mason acknowledged that A.M. had never been put in restraints while at

Fairfax, never forcibly injected with medication, never required seclusion or withdrawal

of privileges, never physically assaulted anyone, and had appropriate boundaries.

However despite being hospitalized for over a month, having all of her basic needs met,

and having staff to redirect her when she started losing control, she remained

delusional, disorganized, paranoid, verbally aggressive, and threatening.

A.M. then testified on her own behalf. She said that the statement, "I will kick

your ass" was an exaggeration, although she acknowledged being upset. She claimed

she was taking medication, working with a doctor, and going to group but was not

interested in long-term psychiatric evaluation. She said she would not hurt someone

"unless they wish to hurt me first." She claimed to have leukemia, not a psychological

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