In Re The Detention Of Marshall Mcgrath

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 3, 2016
Docket74038-5
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

C3 __»

In the Matter of the Detention of ]1 No. 74038-5-1 4. ^ --' (:..r M.M., 1 DIVISION ONE \ GO ^ ';

*T7» Appellant. ] UNPUBLISHED OPINION o

FILED: October 3, 2016 CO

Mann, J. — M.M. seeks reversal of a decision revoking a least restrictive

alternative order and remanding him for inpatient treatment. He contends that the State

did not cite to, or comply with, the law in effect at the time it sought to revoke the least

restrictive alternative order. He contends further that the trial court then erred by

applying the outdated statute and failing to consider all of the factors set forth in the

amended and recodified statute. Review of the record and the trial court's final order

indicates that all of the statutorily mandated factors were considered by the trial court

even though the State's petition erroneously cited the outdated version of the applicable

statute, RCW 71.05.590. Therefore, we affirm. No. 74038-5-1/2

FACTS

M.M. was diagnosed with unspecified psychosis and epilepsy. On July 8, 2015,

Designated Mental Health Professional (DMHP)1 Charlene McKinley filed a petition to

place M.M. on an involuntary treatment hold pursuant to chapter 71.05 RCW. After

evaluating M.M., Fairfax Hospital filed a petition for 14-day involuntary treatment on July

10, 2015, and the court ordered M.M. to be held at Fairfax Hospital for a period not to

exceed 14 days. The court found that M.M. presented a likelihood of serious harm to

others and that treatment in a less restrictive alternative setting was not in the best

interest of M.M. or others. RCW 71.05.240. On July 22, 2015, Fairfax Hospital

petitioned for an additional 90-day restrictive involuntary treatment ("Commitment

Petition").2

On August 12, 2015, M.M. entered into an agreed Less Restrictive Alternative,

and an order was entered to that effect (LRO). The LRO was set to expire on

November 10, 2015. The LRO specified in part that M.M. would:

A. Reside at mental health treatment provider approved housing and follow all house rules and regulations. B. Attend all appointments with and follow treatment recommendations of Jessie Leone.... C. Take all medications as prescribed, including medications prescribed while in or being discharged from the hospital.[3]

M.M. was released from the hospital that same day. On August 23, 2015, DMHP

Jared Lathrop-Weber filed a petition to revoke M.M.'s LRO. M.M. was homeless and

had presented himself at Harborview Medical Center. The petition alleged that M.M.

1 "Designated mental health professional[s]" are "mental health professionals] designated by the county or other authority authorized in rule to perform the duties specified in [chapter 71.05 RCW]," which deals with evaluation, treatment and commitment of individuals with mental illness. RCW 71.05.020(11). 2 Clerk's Papers (CP) at 23. No. 74038-5-1/3

was failing to adhere to the terms and conditions of his LRO, demonstrated substantial

deterioration of functioning, showed evidence of substantial decompensation, and

posed a likelihood of serious harm. M.M. was making psychotic statements regarding

the medication he received from Fairfax. He reported that he was not taking his

medication—including needed medication for epilepsy—while continuing to drive. M.M.

was unable to care for his health and safety in the community. The record does not

indicate whether any action was taken on this petition, but M.M. was apparently taken

into custody and then released from the hospital on September 2, 2015, still subject to

the terms of the LRO.

On September 14, 2015, DMHP Julie Gamble filed a second petition to revoke

the LRO ("Revocation Petition"). The Revocation Petition cited to RCW 71.05.320

and/or RCW 71.05.340, RCW 71.05.340(3)(a), and included allegations that M.M.: (1) is

failing to adhere to the terms and conditions of the LRO; and/or (2) demonstrating a

substantial deterioration of functioning; and (3) poses a likelihood of serious harm.

Gamble alleged that M.M. was referred for evaluation by his family and by his

case manager at Downtown Emergency Services Center (DESC), the agency

supervising M.M.'s LRO. She further alleged that M.M. was refusing to take his

psychiatric medications since his release on September 2 and refusing to participate in

mental health treatment. She alleged that M.M. "presents as substantially deteriorated

[and] poses a likelihood of serious harm in that he has a history of serious assault on

family ... (in 2013 he beat his brother and broke his nose)."4 Thus, Gamble alleged

that continued release was not in the best interest of M.M. or the community. In support

3 CP at 32. 4 CP at 49. No. 74038-5-1/4

of the Revocation Petition, Gamble attached a declaration written by Avery Fisher,

M.M.'s DESC case manager. Fisher stated that M.M. was failing to comply with the

terms and conditions of the LRO by refusing to take medication as prescribed and

declining to participate in mental health treatment, and that he presents evidence of

substantial decompensation, and poses a likelihood of serious harm. She noted that

M.M. "has a history of violence against others per Harborview records."5 She stated

that she offered M.M. "one-on-one mental health case management and medications"

for his psychiatric disorder, but he declined.6

At the revocation hearing on September 18, 2015, four witnesses testified as to

events occurring both prior and subsequent to entry of the LRO. Angela McGrath,

M.M.'s mother, testified that she did not believe M.M. was taking his psychiatric

medications because on September 4, 2015, she found a prescription bottle full of 30

pills inside the trailer where M.M. was staying. She also testified regarding events

occurring before entry of the LRO on August 12, 2015. She testified that in July 2015,

M.M. had been violent with her, blocked her passage out of the kitchen, grabbed her by

the waist, and pulled her out onto the deck. McGrath fled and secured an order of

protection preventing M.M. from coming within 50 feet of her.

Jan Rose Ottaway Martin was M.M.'s DESC case manager. She testified at the

revocation hearing by reading M.M.'s progress notes into the record. The notes

indicated that M.M. was not following through with DESC's mental health treatment plan

or taking his medications. Specifically, M.M. failed to appear for his pre-arranged intake

appointment on August 21, and he was hospitalized at Harborview on September 2,

5 CP at 52. 6 CP at 52. No. 74038-5-1/5

2015, where case manager Avery Fischer evaluated him. M.M. declined the services

offered by DESC. M.M. wanted to switch to a different mental health agency in Auburn,

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