Weisenburger v. R.S.

2006 ND 253, 725 N.W.2d 193, 2006 N.D. LEXIS 259
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2006
Docket20060318
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2006 ND 253 (Weisenburger v. R.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weisenburger v. R.S., 2006 ND 253, 725 N.W.2d 193, 2006 N.D. LEXIS 259 (N.D. 2006).

Opinions

CROTHERS, Justice.

[¶ 1] R.S. appealed from an order requiring him to be hospitalized at the North Dakota State Hospital for 90 days and an order allowing him to be treated involun[195]*195tarily with medication during that 90-day period. We conclude the district court’s finding that R.S. is a person requiring treatment is not clearly erroneous and affirm.

I

[¶ 2] R.S., a 48-year-old male, was admitted to the State Hospital in early October 2006 after a law enforcement officer witnessed him behaving erratically. After his evaluation at the State Hospital, R.S. was diagnosed with psychotic disorder. A nurse practitioner at the State Hospital filed a petition to have R.S. involuntarily committed for treatment. Dr. William Pryatel, R.S.’s treating psychiatrist at the State Hospital, also filed a request to involuntarily treat R.S. with medication during his hospitalization.

[¶ 3] At the involuntary commitment hearing, the district court heard testimony from four witnesses regarding R.S.’s mental health. Three witnesses were called by the petitioner: Officer Ted Rainesalo, Dr. William Pryatel, and R.S.’s nephew. R.S. testified on his own behalf.

[¶ 4] Officer Rainesalo testified regarding the incident at the Devils Lake Police Department in September 2006 which resulted in R.S.’s admission to the State Hospital. Officer Rainesalo recounted that R.S. entered the police station looking lost, and that he spoke with R.S. for about five minutes, during which it was obvious that R.S. was in some kind of mental distress. According to Officer Rainesalo, R.S. stated he was having a problem with a lady in a black magic shop out at Fort Totten who was reading his mind and preventing him from sleeping. After a few minutes, R.S. stopped talking, and the officer told him that he could come back if he needed to talk some more. About fifteen minutes later, R.S. returned to the police station. Officer Rainesalo testified he heard the department secretary calling his name. He looked out the door of his office and saw R.S. approaching. In the officer’s words, “I was approximately 10 feet from [R.S.], I noticed he was carrying a gun in his left hand down along his left leg. And I immediately took about three steps and got a hold of the gun and took custody of it and [R.S.].” The officer testified he felt threatened even though R.S. did not verbally threaten him or point the gun at anybody. Officer Rainesalo further testified that when he asked R.S. what he was doing, R.S. replied he was bringing the gun into the police department to “check it out.” After the officer seized the gun, he discovered it was unloaded, although ammunition was found in R.S.’s vehicle.

[¶ 5] Dr. Pryatel, R.S.’s treating psychiatrist, also testified at the involuntary commitment hearing. Dr. Pryatel testified that R.S. minimizes or denies his problems and says that they were just dreams. He stated that R.S. has been very guarded at the State Hospital and has not cooperated with providing information for psychological testing. Dr. Pryatel also testified that R.S. was admitted to the State Hospital after having talked about a hit man named Eugene who was trying to get him. Dr. Pryatel testified about the risk of harm that R.S. presents, stating:

Q. What risk of harm do you believe he presents?
A. Well, we have an individual here who reportedly in the community has been feeling there’s a hit man out after him. We had this bizarre behavior with the gun, with the weapon, and so un-medicated this type of thing tends to spiral and get worse and worse and so, you know, I think it could lead to an event.
Q. Is that based on the characteristics of this diagnosis [psychotic disorder] that it tends to go in that direction?
[196]*196A. If not interrupted it tends to get worse.
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Q. And per your previous testimony you believe without the treatment that there’s a spiral that could go on here that would lead to a risk of harm to others in the future.
A. These disorders don’t tend to get better on their own, if anything they tend to get worse and worse and so we’ve been warned.
Q. So you believe that the presence of the gun is a significant indicator of future dangerousness?
A. Making statements that he feels a hit man is out after him and has a weapon here so ...
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Q. And it appears you have no past treatment history that you could make any predictions based on with [R.S.]? A. We don’t have any history with him, I’m just going by what our experience has been in the past and also, you know, psychiatry.
Q. Clinical experience?
A. Clinical experience and psychiatry in general.

[¶ 6] Dr. Pryatel was asked about the significance of R.S.’s possession of the gun, and explained:

My hypothesis is that he needed the gun because he was being stalked, that there was a hit man after him and — and you have to remember he shows up at the police station the first time and didn’t say anything and kind of wanders around and stuff and then came back again with the gun. So maybe there was enough sense with him to not actually use the weapon, you know, some part of him told him he needed to get to the police station and everything is not all right here and so on as opposed to taking things in his own hands, taking matters into his own hands.

[¶ 7] R.S.’s adult nephew also testified, stating R.S. is self-sufficient and lives alone in an apartment, and that R.S. has been a full-time employee on a park board maintenance staff for about fifteen years. However, the nephew testified he was concerned because R.S. has exhibited increasing levels of paranoia. According to the nephew, R.S. does not want to leave his house because he thinks “there’s always people, someone out to get him or a sniper, even at work.” The nephew occasionally accompanied R.S. at work and testified R.S. “would be looking around thinking there was a sniper out there or somebody ready to take him out.” R.S. also verbalized his fears that family members and anyone else who tried to help R.S. were “out to get him.”

[¶ 8] On a driving trip last summer, R.S. was grabbing the door and getting ready to jump out of the moving vehicle because he thought that his nephew and other relatives were going to throw him into a Utah salt mine. The nephew also recounted that R.S. would hear his name over a police scanner when it was not there and that R.S. thought there were microphones planted in his house. Despite these bizarre incidents, the nephew stated twice that he did not think R.S. would harm himself or anyone else because R.S. tends to lock himself up or isolate himself.

[¶ 9] R.S. also testified at the commitment hearing. With regard to the incident at the police station, R.S. testified that he brought the gun into the station to check if it was stolen. According to R.S., he purchased the gun from a person on the street “three, four, five years” ago. Although R.S. admitted telling Officer Rainesalo about a black magic shop, he denied that he ever told the officer about a lady at Fort Totten reading his mind. When he [197]*197was questioned about several different alleged delusions, R.S.

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Related

Weisenburger v. R.S.
2006 ND 253 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2006)
Interest of C.L.
2006 ND 252 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 ND 253, 725 N.W.2d 193, 2006 N.D. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisenburger-v-rs-nd-2006.