State of West Virginia v. Chip Melton Davidow

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 2016
Docket15-0876
StatusPublished

This text of State of West Virginia v. Chip Melton Davidow (State of West Virginia v. Chip Melton Davidow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of West Virginia v. Chip Melton Davidow, (W. Va. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA

SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA,

Plaintiff Below, Respondent FILED October 13, 2016 vs) No. 15-0876 (Raleigh County 94-F-330) released at 3:00 p.m. RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS CHIP MELTON DAVIDOW, OF WEST VIRGINIA

Defendant Below, Petitioner

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Petitioner Chip Melton Davidow (hereinafter “petitioner”), by counsel, Maryl C. Sattler, appeals the Circuit Court of Raleigh County’s August 5, 2015, order denying his motion for order directing transfer to less restrictive placement. Petitioner, who was found not guilty of first degree murder by reason of insanity in 1996, had been successfully placed at his own expense in a Massachusetts psychiatric program for approximately twenty years, where he lived in a group home. Upon its closure, the circuit court ordered petitioner returned to West Virginia whereupon he was placed at Sharpe Hospital, then transferred to Highland Hospital, a secured psychiatric facility. Petitioner moved for a less restrictive placement and the circuit court found that petitioner was not entitled to a transfer to a similar program in Massachusetts inasmuch as West Virginia maintains adequate, similar facilities and programs enabling petitioner to be placed in the “least restrictive” environment which would also allow for protection of the public. The State, by counsel, David A. Stackpole, filed a response in support of the circuit court’s findings.

This Court has considered the parties’ briefs, oral arguments, and the appendix record on appeal. Under the limited circumstances presented in this case, we find a memorandum decision reversing the circuit court and remanding for further proceedings appropriate under Rule 21 of the West Virginia Rules of Appellate Procedure. As explained below, we conclude that the circuit court’s order failed to properly reach the issue of whether petitioner is currently placed in the “least restrictive” environment which allows for protection of the public and therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings as necessary and entry of an order consistent herewith.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On June 23, 1994, petitioner murdered a truck driver after suffering a psychotic episode during which he believed J. Edgar Hoover told him to assassinate a man in a panel truck.

He forced the victim’s truck off the road and shot and stabbed him numerous times, believing the victim was a “quick healer.” Upon psychiatric evaluation, petitioner was determined to be suffering from paranoid schizophrenia.1 During the pendency of the underlying criminal proceedings, petitioner was transferred to Bournewood Hospital in Brookline, Massachusetts upon motion of defense counsel and with the agreement of the State, for a “clinical setting evaluation and psychiatric care[.]” Shortly thereafter, an agreed order transferred petitioner to Wild Acre Inns (hereinafter “Wild Acre”) in Lexington, Massachusetts; the order indicated only that petitioner’s counsel had received a request from Bournewood that petitioner be transferred to Wild Acre.

On December 23, 1996, the circuit court found petitioner not criminally responsible for first degree murder, committing him to “a mental health facility within or without this state for a period equal to the maximum sentence allowable,” For the next eighteen years, only two notable events occurred in the criminal case. First, in 1999, the court granted petitioner permission to travel to Washington, D. C. with a chaperone for his mother’s funeral. More notably, in 2000, an order for transport and commitment to Sharpe Hospital was entered, noting that Wild Acre was “no longer available.”2 The order curiously ordered Wild Acre to transport petitioner “insofar as they are willing to do so[.]” However, it is clear from the record that all parties agree this order was never disseminated to Wild Acre.

For the next approximate eighteen years, petitioner continued to be housed and treated at Wild Acre, at his own expense. He advanced through Wild Acre’s stepdown procedures, ultimately winding up in a staffed, group home with daily monitoring.3 In particular, this level of placement allowed him to participate in a therapeutic music group known as “Tunefoolery,” a group comprised of individuals with mental health issues. The record appears

1 A psychological evaluation conducted by Dr. David Clayman shortly after the crime occurred recommended that petitioner “be hospitalized for as long as permitted by the law to protect society, because it is likely he could cause harm again if he should stop his medication[.]” An evaluation by Dr. Russell Voltin shortly thereafter stated that he “[did] not feel that Mr. Davidow will ever be safe to release into society” and should “remain in psychiatric care in an inpatient hospital setting, preferably, a forensic unit for the criminally insane.” 2 There is no indication in the record what may have prompted this order or the basis of the order’s statement that Wild Acre was “no longer available[.]” That facility did not close until 2014. 3 Petitioner’s program indicates that he lived in a group home a short walk from the clinical facility and walked there daily for medications and a mental status exam. He provided a daily schedule and was monitored for adherence, checking in upon departure and return. He participated in a day program, the music group/program “Tunefoolery,” was escorted to his psychiatric appointments, the grocery store, and attended one therapeutic group weekly.

clear that during this time, petitioner was medication-compliant, cooperative, trustworthy, and had suffered no relapses of psychotic episodes.4

In August, 2014, the circuit court was informed that Wild Acre was closing its Lexington facility where petitioner was housed; a sister campus of Wild Acre located in Belmont, Massachusetts, however, was to remain open under new ownership. The court conducted a hearing and heard from petitioner’s psychiatrist, Dr. Kantar, and Wild Acre Belmont’s (hereinafter “Belmont”) new owner, John Sciretta, indicating that petitioner was suitable for placement in the Belmont facility. Nevertheless, the circuit court ordered petitioner immediately transferred to Sharpe Hospital, a secure psychiatric facility, for evaluation and a determination of the proper placement in light of Wild Acre’s closure. Petitioner was transferred to Sharpe Hospital on September 14, 2014. On November 3, 2014, he was transferred from Sharpe to Highland Hospital in Clarksburg, for reasons that do not appear from the record. The Statewide Forensic Coordinator, Georgette Bradstreet (hereinafter “Ms. Bradstreet”) wrote to the court and advised that “there is no distinction between Sharpe and Highland Hospitals in so far as security and safety precautions. Both facilities maintain patients on a secure locked unit.”5

On May 4, 2015, petitioner moved for a transfer to a less restrictive placement, namely, Belmont. Petitioner argued that the twenty-year freedom of movement and relative independent living he enjoyed at Wild Acre had been replaced with what was tantamount to a maximum security prison. The State presented testimony from Ms. Bradstreet, who testified that West Virginia was well-equipped to provide petitioner with the least restrictive placement, having many group homes or community placement programs to offer. She noted, however, that petitioner would have to work his way through the stepdown process to earn the right to such placements. Petitioner presented documentation from Belmont’s new owner which included a treatment plan providing for continuity of providers and care, with a couple of enhancements and characterized the change as one of “real estate” rather than care. Petitioner further presented a report by retained psychologist Dr.

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State of West Virginia v. Chip Melton Davidow, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-west-virginia-v-chip-melton-davidow-wva-2016.