In the Matter of P.K.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedNovember 2, 2022
Docket22-0363
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of P.K. (In the Matter of P.K.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of P.K., (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-0363 Filed November 2, 2022

IN THE MATTER OF P.K., ALLEGED TO BE SERIOUSLY MENTALLY IMPAIRED,

P.K., Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Lee (North) County, Ty Rogers,

District Associate Judge.

The respondent appeals the district court decision finding he continued to

be seriously mentally impaired. AFFIRMED.

Kimberly A. Auge of The Auge Law Firm, Fort Madison, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Chandlor Collins, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee State.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Schumacher and Chicchelly, JJ. 2

SCHUMACHER, Judge.

The respondent, P.K., appeals the district court decision finding he

continued to be seriously mentally impaired. P.K. conceded that he had a mental

illness. P.K. asserts that he has sufficient judgment to make responsible decisions

on treatment. He also asserts that the evidence does not show that if he were

allowed to remain at liberty, he would be likely to inflict injury on himself or others.

We find the court’s decision is supported by substantial evidence and P.K. is

seriously mentally impaired.

I. Background Facts & Proceedings

P.K. is an inmate with the Iowa Department of Corrections (Department)

who has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and schizoaffective

disorder, depressive type. In 2019, he was determined to be seriously mentally

impaired. At that time he was very unpredictable, continually broke the rules, and

was not taking medication. We affirmed the district court’s decision finding P.K.

was seriously mentally impaired. In re P.K., No. 19-0567, 2020 WL 824170, at *5

(Iowa Ct. App. Feb. 19, 2020). P.K. remained under psychiatric treatment with the

Department.

On May 7, 2021, P.K. requested a review or dismissal of his case, claiming

he no longer met the criteria under Iowa Code chapter 229 (2021) for adjudication

as being seriously mentally impaired. A periodic report dated May 26 by Misti

Deutschle, a staff psychiatrist nurse practitioner, found P.K. “is seriously mentally

impaired and in need of treatment, but can continue in outpatient treatment.”

Deutschle reported: 3

[P.K.] was last seen April 1, 2021, and had just received his monthly injection. He has moved into a level of having more privileges. No further delusions, hallucinations, or disciplinary reports. He states he is doing well and again asks to have the injection discontinued. I did discontinue the medications and on a May 7, 2021 follow-up with psychology, he continued to report doing well. I continue to recommend civil commitment for [P.K.] to ensure that we can intervene if necessary, and force medications to preserve his function. This is because he shows little insight into when his decompensations occur, and he is unable to improve on his own without medications, which he did not take when very symptomatic. He is having no symptoms but this is also his first month without the scheduled medications.

In a report from June 23, Deutschle reported that since discontinuing

medication, P.K. punched another inmate and was found guilty of assault and

obstructive/disruptive conduct. P.K. told Deutschle the assault “had nothing to do

with his psychiatric well-being,” but was due to the conduct of the other inmate.

Deutschle continued to recommend civil commitment for P.K.

P.K.’s request for review or dismissal was set for a hearing on June 24. On

that date, P.K. refused to participate in the proceeding. The court stated, “[P.K.]

was informed refusal to participate would lead to denial of his request and he

informed the prison official he understood and refused to participate.” The court

ruled that the prior order for outpatient commitment was confirmed. The court

found P.K. remained seriously mentally impaired and in need of treatment.

On October 4, Deutschle reported:

Since [August 3, 2021], [P.K.] has refused to be seen for his psychiatric med management appointments and has had disciplinary reports for being out of place of assignment and refusing directives. On September 14, 2021 he threatened to kill the unit manager and his injection was restarted at this time, he has attempted to refuse it. 4

She stated P.K. was seriously mentally impaired and needed to remain in civil

commitment. The court determined P.K. continued to be seriously mentally

impaired.

Deutschle reported on December 27:

I met with [P.K.] on October 5, 2021. This appointment was ended abruptly after he began screaming at me for restarting his injection, accused me of laughing at him, and was verbally abusive, repeatedly calling me derogatory names. He demanded that I help him get this civil commitment dropped.

She noted that P.K. refused to leave his cell for appointments and meetings,

including his psychiatric appointments. P.K. told Deutschle the milk was tainted

“and it was leaking stuff out of it.” He also referred to his medication as “poison.”

Deutschle again recommended that P.K. remain in civil commitment. The court

found P.K.’s condition remained unchanged—he was seriously mentally impaired

and in need of treatment.

On January 10, 2022, P.K. requested a review of his civil commitment case.

Deutschle’s report from January 25 stated that at P.K.’s request his medication

was decreased. She continued to recommend civil commitment.

A review hearing was held on February 5. Deutschle testified that when

P.K.’s medication was decreased he began having more behavioral problems.

Deutschle pointed out that P.K. did very well while he was on medication. She

was questioned:

Q. Do you believe he’d be a danger to himself or others if there was not an outpatient treatment and committal in place? A. I do. Just since he’s been off this time he’s threatened to kill the unit manager. He was very threatening towards myself. I mean, he’s threatened to kill several staff members. He has physically—he has had physical altercations with staff members as long as—or as well as other inmates. And again, that was when he was unmedicated. 5

Deutschle stated that P.K. had no interest in voluntarily taking any medications for

his mental-health problems.

P.K. agreed with the diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder but

disputed that he had schizoaffective disorder, depressive type. He stated that his

altercation with another inmate was not due to his mental health but was due to

the conduct of the other inmate. P.K. denied making threatening statements to

staff members. He stated that he called Deutschle a disrespectful name but

asserted that it was because she laughed at him. He claimed that he could be

successful without medication.

The court issued a decision on February 15, finding “the State has met its

burden and established by clear and convincing evidence that [P.K.] continues to

be seriously mentally ill within the scope and meaning of Iowa Code Chapter 229.”

The court noted Deutschle testified P.K. “ha[d] poor insight into the severity of his

mental health condition and the need to treat his condition with medications.” The

court found, “When he takes such medications his negative behaviors subside,

when he stops the medications, the paranoia, delusional thinking, aggression, and

threatening behaviors start again.” The court also found, “This violence and

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