Richard H. v. Consilvio

6 A.D.3d 7, 773 N.Y.S.2d 356, 2004 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2254
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 4, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 6 A.D.3d 7 (Richard H. v. Consilvio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard H. v. Consilvio, 6 A.D.3d 7, 773 N.Y.S.2d 356, 2004 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2254 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Mazzarelli, J.

At age 20, petitioner Richard H. was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. He is now 39 and has been involuntarily committed to various psychiatric institutions for 19 years. His first commitment, in 1984, resulted from an arrest for a series of bank robberies and attempted bank robberies. At each bank, petitioner had handed the teller a note demanding money, and threatened that he had either a gun or a bomb. Apparently, he did have a toy gun, but never displayed it or used any other violence in connection with the robberies. After his arrest, petitioner explained that he had committed the crimes because his former employer owed him money, which he was seeking to recover by robbing banks. He also thought that people would kill him if he did not steal the money. Richard H. pleaded guilty to second-degree attempted robbery, and was paroled pending sentence. While on parole, he resumed his attempts to rob banks and was rearrested. In June 1984, after a Criminal Procedure [9]*9Law article 730 examination, he was found unfit to stand trial and was committed to Mid-Hudson Psychiatric Center (Mid-Hudson). In January 1985, petitioner entered a plea of not responsible by reason of mental disease or defect (CPL 220.15) and was committed to the custody of the Commissioner of Mental Health (the Commissioner) pending further proceedings pursuant to CPL 330.20.

In February 1985, as required by CPL 330.20 (6), the court held a hearing and concluded that petitioner was suffering from a dangerous mental disorder under CPL 330.20 (1) (c). Petitioner was ordered retained at Mid-Hudson, a secure psychiatric facility. In October 1985, he was transferred to Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center (Kirby), also a secure facility, where he remained for approximately three years after the issuance of several CPL 330.20 (9) retention orders.

After a 1988 retention hearing, petitioner was deemed no longer dangerously mentally ill and was transferred to Kingsboro Psychiatric Center (Kingsboro), a nonsecure civil psychiatric facility. Within less than a year, he absconded four times. During his last escape, petitioner was arrested for attempting to commit more bank robberies. This time, he told'investigators that he was seeking compensation for head injuries inflicted by police officers in the early 1980s. Petitioner again entered a plea of not responsible by reason of mental disease or defect (CPL 220.15) and, on September 10, 1990, following another CPL 330.20 (6) hearing, he was ordered recommitted to Kirby. A succession of retention orders has since been issued (see CPL 330.20 [9]), one of which was granted on consent. During this period, the Commissioner also defended a number of the retention orders against petitioner’s applications for nonjury rehearing and review (CPL 330.20 [16]). Petitioner remains at Kirby.

This appeal arises from the Commissioner’s most recent (July 2002) application for a retention order. After holding a hearing, the court granted the Commissioner’s application, finding that petitioner continued to suffer from a dangerous mental disorder, and ordered him retained in a secure psychiatric facility for 18 months. Petitioner sought rehearing and review of this determination under CPL 330.20 (16), and a different court held a hearing before a jury.

Petitioner was represented by Mental Health Legal Services at the hearing. The Attorney General appeared on behalf of the Commissioner and respondent Consilvio, Director of Kirby. The District Attorney also appeared in support of the respondent [10]*10Commissioner. Petitioner’s treating doctors did not testify. Instead, the Director of Psychiatry at Kirby, Dr. James Hicks, testified for the Commissioner. Dr. Hicks supervised petitioner’s treating doctors and had personally examined Richard H. four times. He had also reviewed petitioner’s records, which included observations made by other doctors, nurses, aides and social workers. Dr. Hicks opined that petitioner had suffered from paranoid schizophrenia for more than 20 years, that he had antisocial personality traits and was only borderline functioning. He described Richard H.’s symptoms as including persistent delusions1 and lack of insight which led him to commit the bank robberies. Further, Dr. Hicks explained that schizophrenia is “generally not curable” but that it can be treated with medication to a point where some people have no symptoms at ah.

Dr. Hicks reviewed petitioner’s criminal history. He also noted that Richard H. had been treated for several behavioral disorders. He stated that petitioner had been transferred to a nonsecure facility in 1988 when antipsychotic medications had taken effect, but that he had left that facility many times without permission. Dr. Hicks explained that since 1989, Richard H. has been treated with two different types of medications. One type was antipsychotic tranquilizers such as Haldol, Mellaril or Thorazine. These treated his hallucinations, delusions and disorganized thinking. The other type was mood stabilizers such as Lithium and Valproic Acid. These were used to dampen petitioner’s schizophrenic symptoms of grandiosity and agitation. Dr. Hicks testified that when Richard H. refused to take his medications, he became delusional, claiming that people owed him money. Richard H., Dr. Hicks said, always improved when he resumed taking his medications and became relatively stable, but that he would stop taking his medications and his symptoms would then resume. Dr. Hicks also advised that in 1989 and 1997, it had been necessary to obtain court orders to administer medications over petitioner’s objection.

According to Dr. Hicks, petitioner began refusing to eat in 2002, because he thought his food was being poisoned, and lost approximately 40 pounds. Petitioner was then given Risperidone, another antipsychotic drug, which lessened his delusions about his food and allowed him to gain weight. However, in May 2003, Dr. Hicks said that petitioner again refused to eat because [11]*11he believed that someone had been tampering with his food. The doctor testified that petitioner had expressed a similar delusion only a month before this hearing.

Dr. Hicks opined that Richard H. had not improved enough to warrant a transfer to a nonsecure facility because he had a profound lack of insight into his mental illness, as well as delusional thinking and antisocial personality traits. Dr. Hicks concluded that because petitioner had been dangerous in the past, the fact that he still lacks insight about his illness and his need for medication predisposed him to repeat his former behavior if transferred to a nonsecure facility.

Next, Dr. Daniel Capruso testified on behalf of petitioner. Dr. Capruso is a psychologist and member of the Kirby Forensic Committee who had interviewed and evaluated petitioner three times. He had testified at some of Richard H.’s prior retention hearings. Initially, Dr. Capruso read petitioner’s psychiatric history into the record and stated that petitioner was not dangerous because of a dramatic and substantial improvement in his condition during the prior year. He also testified that petitioner’s treating doctors did not find him to be dangerous. However, as Dr. Capruso continued to testify, he acknowledged that Richard H. did pose some risk of harm, mostly to himself and, remotely, to others. Dr. Capruso said that for petitioner, “dangerous behavior” meant that he could place himself in situations where he could be hurt because of his delusions about food and the possibility that he might resume attempting to rob banks. Ultimately, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 A.D.3d 7, 773 N.Y.S.2d 356, 2004 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-h-v-consilvio-nyappdiv-2004.