Mental Health Association of Portland

Oregon's independent and impartial mental health advocate

Archive for February, 2011

Alien Boy: the Death and Life of James Chasse

Posted by admin2 on 28th February 2011

The Mental Health Association of Portland is using Kickstarter to finish the documentary film, Alien Boy: the Death and Life of James Chasse.

Click here to make an online pledge. It’s easy, secure and safe.

Over 400 persons have already contributed time, in-kind services and cash to create this important documentary film. Join them – and your contribution is fully tax deductible.

What Happened to James Chasse?

On September 17, 2006, James Chasse, a small and gentle man with schizophrenia, was tackled by three law officers in front of dozens of eyewitnesses on a downtown street corner in Portland, Oregon.

He was not suspected of a crime, nor had he committed one.

Eyewitnesses report the officers used “knees to the chest, punches to the face” and a Taser to subdue Chasse. He was handcuffed and lost consciousness for several moments. Eyewitnesses feared he was dead.

Paramedics arrived to the scene, but police neglected to share the truth of their violent struggle with Chasse, or his loss of consciousness. Chasse was then hogtied and loaded into the back of a police car and taken to the police station, not a nearby hospital.

Jail nurses refused to admit Chasse due to the extent of his injuries, and demanded he be taken to a hospital. Rather than going to one of three emergency rooms within two miles, the officers who beat him started to drive Chasse to an emergency room six miles away. He died in the back of the police car.

The autopsy reports Chasse suffered 17 broken ribs, a separated shoulder, a punctured lung, and numerous bruises and contusions. At the scene of the struggle, police told on-lookers Chasse was homeless and had 14 felony convictions for selling cocaine. Not true: Chasse had no criminal record and lived in an apartment just a few blocks away.

The Film

Alien Boy: the Death and Life of James Chasse is a feature-length documentary film that:

  • Examines the death and life of James Chasse
  • Explores the impact and meaning of James Chasse’s death to the city of Portland
  • Asks questions about how we as a society treat persons with a diagnosis of mental illness

The film takes a deep look at Chasse’s life, uncovering his suburban childhood, participation in Portland’s early punk rock scene, the onset of his schizophrenia in his teen years, the peeling away of friendships and opportunities as his illness progressed, and his ability to carve out an independent existence despite his mental illness.

Your Help is Crucial

The documentary film Alien Boy: the Death and Life of James Chasse is a project of the Mental Health Association of Portland. All donations are tax deductible, and all revenue generated by the film goes to support the nonprofit advocacy organization.

Our final post-production budget is $12,500. This will go to sound composing, engineering and mixing, still image recording, promotional artwork and printing, DVD reproduction, web site development, music rights, film festival submission fees and travel to festivals.

Click here to make an online pledge.

Who’s Making Alien Boy: the Death and Life of James Chasse?

The director is Brian Lindstrom, who has made two other feature length documentaries, Kicking, about drug detoxification in Portland, and Finding Normal, about recovery from drug addiction, also made in Portland.

John Campbell, cinematographer of Alien Boy, is a veteran cameraman with credits on dozens of Hollywood films, including two with Gus Van Sant, Mala Noche and My Own Private Idaho.

Charlie Campbell composed the score and select additional music for the film. Charlie is a semi-retired rock musician most famous for fronting the band Pond. He now creates music for TV and movies, including Full Grown Men and Winter’s Passing.

Andrew Saunderson is Alien Boy’s Co-Editor and Associate Producer. He joined the production team in 2008 while a student at Lewis & Clark College and quickly established himself as indispensable. He was Assistant Editor on the feature-length documentary To Pay My Way With Stories (2009) and the award-winning narrative/documentary hybrid Old Town Diary (2010).

Thank you for your support.

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Are Oregon State Hospital consultants worth it?

Posted by admin2 on 27th February 2011

From the Salem Statesman Journal, February 27, 2011

State officials refuse to answer questions about two mental-health consultants who have been paid $1 million to help the Oregon State Hospital respond to an ongoing U.S. Department of Justice investigation of the Salem psychiatric facility.

The taxpayer-subsidized tab for the consulting duo has nearly doubled since the Statesman Journal first reported on their pay in July 2009.

Despite this escalating expense, officials say the consultants work is off-limits to the public because it is part of the state’s response to the four-year federal investigation.

The hospital initially agreed to answer a set of written questions posed by the newspaper about the consultants work. Officials reversed course last week, opting not to respond.

In addition, officials canceled the newspaper’s prearranged Friday interview with OSH Superintendent Greg Roberts. The interview was set up to get the hospital leader’s take on the consulting work performed by Dr. Jeffrey Geller, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and Kris McLoughlin, a mental-health consultant based in California.

Among the written questions submitted by the newspaper that were left unanswered:

  • Who do the two consultants report to at OSH?
  • Do they issue written reports, oral reports, or both?
  • How does their expertise benefit the hospital? What are some concrete examples?
  • In what specific ways have they assisted OSH in responding to the federal investigation?
  • How does their consulting role differ from the legal assistance provided to OSH by the state Attorney General’s Office?
  • How long will the two consultants continue to work at OSH?

On Friday, hospital spokeswoman Rebeka Gipson-King described the unwillingness to answer questions about the consultants as a mutual decision reached by the hospital and the state Attorney General’s Office.

“Everything that has to do with U.S. DOJ is going to go through the Attorney General’s Office,” she said.

Tony Green, a spokesman for Attorney General John Kroger, said the consultants work is confidential because the recommendations they make on how to improve patient care are connected to the federal investigation.

“The underlying issue is very much the subject of the investigation and potential legal action,” he said. “It’s not something that you can simply separate out and say there’s not a connection between that and the U.S. DOJ investigation. It’s a difficult situation because of the ongoing investigation. We’re doing our best to protect the state while addressing the concerns that are being raised.”

State officials enlisted help from Geller and McLoughlin in August 2006, shortly after the U.S. Department of Justice launched a civil-rights investigation into Oregon’s main mental hospital in June 2006.

Both consultants were highly regarded for their previous work in other states, which often focused on helping troubled psychiatric facilities deal with federal Justice Department investigations.

Terms of Oregon’s initial contracts with Geller and McLoughlin called for each to be paid $75,000, with the contracts to expire Dec. 31, 2006. However, the consultants have been kept on board through contract amendments.

The current veil of confidentiality on the consultants work is a departure from past practice at OSH.

In 2009, then-hospital Superintendent Roy Orr answered various questions that the newspaper posed to him about the work performed by Geller and McLoughlin.

Orr said the consultants typically visited the hospital each month, normally staying for several days and engaging in wide-ranging discussions with hospital officials and staffers.

“Every time they arrive, it’s like a one-week survey,” he said. “They start the week by asking, ‘What progress have you made on the major initiatives and the assignments we handed out last month?’ ”

Orr credited the consultants with playing key roles in helping the hospital launch reform-minded measures, such as sharply reducing the use of seclusion and restraints to control patients — one of many problems spotlighted by federal investigators.

Last week, Geller and McLoughlin separately declined Statesman Journal requests for interviews about their state hospital work, as they previously did in 2009.

In 2009, the newspaper reported that combined pay and expenses for Geller and McLoughlin totaled $517,859 from the start of their consulting work in September 2006 through July 3, 2009.

Since then, the state has paid out $498,384 to them in combined fees and travel expenses, raising the grand total to $1,016,243, according to pay and expense data obtained by the newspaper.

Geller and McLoughlin were the first in a series of outside consultants who have been brought in to help the hospital improve patient care and analyze operations during the prolonged federal investigation.

Among the former and current OSH advisers:

  • Former Lane County Circuit Judge James Hargreaves received $252,465 in state pay for the year he served as governor-appointed “special master” of the hospital. His 14-page report, issued in early 2009, rapped hospital management for poor planning, undefined goals and a lack of urgency.
  • Liberty Healthcare, a Pennsylvania-based consulting firm, was paid $175,000 to study the hospital last year. In September, the consultants concluded the hospital has “invested great energy and vigor in striving to improve, but the results to date have been disappointing.”
  • Kaufman Global, an Indiana-based consulting firm, is getting paid $2 million to spur culture change at the hospital and help it run more efficiently and effectively. The firm’s contract ends on June 30.


Above, Oregon State Senate President Peter Courtney criticizes Oregon State Hospital construction and opening delay in an interview with the editorial board of the Salem Statesman Journal in January 2011.

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Rep. David Wu – News Archive

Posted by admin2 on 26th February 2011

Rep. David Wu (Photo: Flickr.com/Thomas Le Ngo)

Rep. David Wu (Photo: Flickr.com/Thomas Le Ngo)

This is a comprehensive (in progress) archive of media items related to U.S. Rep. David Wu, beginning in January and February 2011, referencing a possible connection to mental health issues.

The Mental Health Association of Portland reposts articles about mental health and addiction policy and opinion in Oregon to provide a durable resource for information and informed discussion. This archive will continue to be updated.

David Wu: “Heartwarming” How Colleagues Have Got My Back, Talking Points Memo – March 3, 2011

David Wu reassures Democrats he’s just fine, Politico.com – March 3, 2011

Catching Up With Rep. David Wu, Slate.com – March 3, 2011

Republicans see 2012 race against Rep. David Wu as ‘highly competitive’, The Hill – March 3, 2011

Ore. congressman says mental health not job issue, TMCnet World News – March 3, 2011

Wu Says Colleagues Are Being Supportive, Roll Call – March 3, 2011

It’s not getting any better for Wu, so quit (Editorial), The Tigard Times – March 3, 2011

For good of Oregon, Wu must step aside (Editorial), The Portland Tribune – March 3, 2011

David Wu’s travails: We should be so lucky to be ‘in a very good place’ (Op-Ed), The Oregonian – March 3, 2011

Rep. David Wu to meet with public in Washington County on Monday, The Oregonian – March 3, 2011

Wu’s World: Police reports detail one set of problems in the congressman’s marriage, Willamette Week – March 2, 2011

Oregon Congressman David Wu: I’m Receiving Mental Health Treatment, Technorati.com – March 2, 2011

Hoyer: ‘Premature’ to speculate whether Rep. David Wu should resign, The Washington Post – March 1,2011

Hoyer Says Calls for Wu to Resign Are Premature, Fox News – March 1, 2011

Rep. Wu discusses drug problems, UPI – March 1, 2011

Rep. Wu’s campaign account in the red, The Hill – March 1, 2011

Wu meets with Democratic leaders, talks to media about his condition, The Daily Astorian – March 1, 2011

Democratic leader Steny Hoyer says calls for David Wu to resign are premature, The Oregonian – March 1, 2011

What researchers know about the gene U.S. Rep. David Wu says made him vulnerable to adverse drug reactions, The Oregonian – March 1, 2011

Starr may run in Wu’s district; can a Republican win there?, The Oregonian – March 1, 2011

Why Was Wu a No-Show?, The Oregonian – March 1, 2011

KATU questions David Wu on why he won’t talk to newspapers, The Oregonian – March 1, 2011

Wu presents some explanations for weird behavior, WashingtonExaminer.com – Feb. 28, 2011

Hoyer: Wu resignation talk is ‘premature’, The Hill – March 1, 2011

David Wu says Ambien, Valium put him in the hospital in 2008, The Oregonian – Feb. 28, 2011

Q&A: David Wu And The Stress Of Elections And Life, OPB News – Feb. 28, 2011

Rep. David Wu details mental health issues, Politico.com – Feb. 28, 2011

David Wu campaigning hard for his seat, The Oregonian – Feb. 28, 2011

Oregon Democrat David Wu and his troubled career in Congress, AM 1360 KUIK – Feb. 28, 2011

Wu explains behavior to state Democrats, KGW.com – Feb. 28, 2011

Rep. Wu Plans To Complete Term In Spite Of Recent Problems, OPB News – Feb. 28, 2011

Ore. congressman explains mental health issues, The Associated Press – Feb. 28, 2011

Rep. David Wu tells local television stations that he’s in a good place, despite scandalous photos, New York Daily News – Feb. 27, 2011

David Wu Dodges Print Reporters, Appears on TV, Says Ex-Staffers are “Not Physicians”, Willamette Week – Feb. 26, 2011

David Wu in Portland: Congressman talks about drugs, e-mails and staff exodus, The Oregonian – Feb. 26, 2011

Rep. David Wu returns to Oregon, faces TV but won’t talk to The Oregonian, The Oregonian – Feb. 26, 2011

David Wu tells KGW he sent e-mails, doesn’t know what medication he took from donor, The Oregonian – Feb. 26, 2011

Editor Peter Bhatia is on KGW’s ‘Straight Talk’ tonight, The Oregonian – Feb. 26, 2011

Oregon Democrat David Wu and his troubled career in Congress, The Oregonian – Feb. 26, 2011

Crazy to run: Wu’s a symptom of Oregon’s candidate problem, The Oregonian – Feb. 26, 2011

Oregon Congressman David Wu: Mental Health Not A Job Issue, Huffington Post – Feb. 26, 2011

David Wu: “I’m in a good place now”, KOIN Local 6 – Feb. 26, 2011

David Wu story raises reader question, The Oregonian – Feb. 25, 2011

Who had the Worst Week in Washington? Rep. David Wu, The Washington Post – Feb. 25, 2011

Wu Showing No Signs Of Stepping Aside, National Journal – Feb. 25, 2011

Political Chat: The Weird Week Of Wu, OPB News – Feb. 25, 2011

David Wu gets Washington Post nod for having ‘Worst Week’, The Oregonian – Feb. 25, 2011

David Wu Files for Re-Election, Names New Treasurer, Willamette Week – Feb. 25, 2011

Newspapers, GOP call for congressman to resign, Albany Times-Union – Feb. 25, 2011

Congressman who donned tiger costume files for re-election, The Hill – Feb. 25, 2011

David Wu’s constituents deserve better (Editorial), The Oregonian – Feb. 24, 2011

David Wu editorials discuss resignation of Oregon congressman, The Oregonian – Feb. 24, 2011

Congressman Wu’s staffers urged him get psychiatric help, Northwest Asian Weekly – Feb. 24, 2011

Oregon Rep. David Wu’s situation raises questions about why staff didn’t act sooner, The Oregonian – Feb. 24, 2011

Rep. David Wu’s antics have hometown paper calling for his resignation, CBS News – Feb. 24, 2011

David Wu Confirms Mental Health Treatment, ThirdAge.com – Feb. 24, 2011

Rep. David Wu facing calls to step down amid revelations of bizarre behavior during reelection run, New York Daily News – Feb. 24, 2011

Congressman David Wu Has a Tiger Problem, New York Magazine – Feb. 24, 2011

Dr Know: Explain David Wu, Willamette Week – Feb. 23, 2011

Wu admits sending ‘unprofessional’ e-mails to staffers, Portland Tribune – February 23 2011

Strange Wu: Why did Congressman David Wu think staffers “threatened to shut down his campaign”?, Willamette Week – Feb. 23, 2011

The Oregonian on Wu: Revisionist history? Or hiding what they really knew last fall?, BlueOregon.com – Feb. 23, 2011

Wu admits to taking donor’s pain pills, The Daily Astorian – Feb. 23, 2011

Newspapers, GOP call for congressman to resign, CBS News – Feb. 23, 2011

Wu should step down for lack of candor, not because of treatment, Eugene Register Guard – Feb. 23, 2011

The Fix: What’s next for Oregon Rep. David Wu?, The Washington Post – Feb. 23, 2011

David Wu Apologizes for the Part of the Story No One Cared About, Time.com – Feb. 23, 2011

Wu tames his tiger?, The Washington Post – Feb. 23, 2011

Oregon congressman says he took painkiller, MSNBC – Feb. 23, 2011

Oregon Rep. David Wu admits to e-mails, urges others to seek mental health care in ‘Good Morning America’ interview, The Oregonian – Feb. 22, 2011

Congressman David Wu tells Good Morning America: I have regrets, sought mental help, The Oregonian – Feb. 22, 2011

Rep. David Wu apologizes for tiger photos, behavior, Politico.com – Feb. 22, 2011

Rep. David Wu apologizes for erratic behavior, USA Today – Feb. 22, 2011

Questions about Rep. David Wu’s behavior not new, Boston Herald – Feb. 22, 2011

Oregon Rep. David Wu airs regrets, owns up to taking prescription painkillers, The Oregonian – Feb. 22, 2011

David Wu’s campaign fined for lack of workers’ compensation insurance, The Oregonian – Feb. 22, 2011

Congressman David Wu Acknowledges Use of Prescription Painkillers, Willamette Week – Feb. 22, 2011

David Wu Tells Good Morning America “I’m in a Good Place Now”, Willamette Week – Feb. 22, 2011

Wu campaign fined over workers’ comp insurance, The Columbian – Feb. 22, 2011

Exclusive Rep. David Wu: I Sent the Emails, I Sought Treatment, I Can Serve Well, ABC News – Feb. 22, 2011

Oregon Rep. David Wu makes headlines with morning interview, The Oregonian – Feb. 22, 2011

Oregon congressman David Wu sought medical help after unusual behavior , The Washington Post – Feb. 22, 2011

Oregon Congressman David Wu: I’m Receiving Mental Health Treatment, The Huffington Post – Feb. 22, 2011

Oregon Democrat David Wu’s ‘bizarre’ tiger-suit photo, The Week – Feb. 22, 2011

Rep. David Wu admits receiving treatment, UPI – Feb. 22, 2011

Congressman David Wu: The end of the charade in the 1st District (Editorial), The Oregonian – Feb. 21, 2011

Oregon Rep. David Wu names himself treasurer of his campaign, The Oregonian – Feb. 21, 2011

News of Oregon Rep. David Wu’s staff’s concerns picked up nationwide, The Oregonian – Feb. 19, 2011

Congressman’s Staff Confronts him for Acting Crazy, Fox News – Feb. 19, 2011

Congressman’s Ex-Staffers Say He’s Mentally Unstable, Newser.com – Feb. 19, 2011

Oregon Democratic leaders say they hope Wu gets help, put off talk of his political future, The Oregonian – Feb. 19, 2011

Rep. David Wu’s staff confronted him over concerns about his mental health, The Oregonian – Feb. 18, 2011

Documents Show Congressman David Wu’s Staff “Threatened to Shut Down His Campaign”, Willamette Week – Feb. 18, 2011

Amidst swirling controversy, David Wu attends state dinner at White House, BlueOregon.com – Jan. 20, 2011

How David Wu wound up at Obama’s State Dinner, The Oregonian – Jan. 20, 2011

David Wu’s political career grows more perilous, The Oregonian – Jan. 19, 2011

Look Who’s Invited to Dinner at The White House, Willamette Week – Jan. 19, 2011

U.S. Rep. David Wu loses staffers, political team amid complaints of public behavior, The Oregonian – Jan. 18, 2011

Last update 2/27/11 4:26 p.m.

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PPB Roll Call Training Video

Posted by admin2 on 25th February 2011

This is a Portland Police Bureau Roll Call Training video – Hobble Review / Excited Delirium, made in July 2007. This video was released in October 2010 by Tom Steenson, attorney for the family of James Chasse. It explains the City’s policy tying a prisoner by the hands and feet, which they call “hobbling,” but is better known as “hog-tie.”

Here’s the Merriam-Webster Dictionary definition of the word hobble.

Intransitive verb: to move along unsteadily or with difficulty; especially : to limp along
Transitive verb: to cause to limp : make lame : cripple
Transitive verb: to fasten together the legs of (as a horse) to prevent straying : fetter b : to place under handicap : hamper, impede

1. She picked up her cane and hobbled across the room.
2. She is sometimes hobbled by self-doubt.
3. He has been hobbled by a knee injury.

After his fatal beating, James Chasse was hog-tied and taken to jail in the back of a patrol car. If the officers had allowed James to be taken to hospital by the EMTs standing by, he would have lived.

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Rep. David Wu’s staff confronted him over concerns about his mental health

Posted by admin2 on 19th February 2011

We repost articles about mental health and and addiction policy and opinion in Oregon regardless of whether we think the article is responsible or the authors intelligent. Our task is to document and archive the public experience of mental health.

This article captures an all-time low for The Oregonian newspaper; typically terrific on mental health issues. If it’s not a plant by Republican operatives it’s a fairly baseless attack on a person who may be in a psychological, psychiatric or existential crisis. What harm has Representative Wu done? Perhaps he has behaved strangely – so what?

Please see Mental Health Association of Portland’s news archive on this topic – click here.

From the Oregonian, February 18, 2011

Three days before the Nov. 2 election, U.S. Rep. David Wu’s most loyal and senior staffers were so alarmed by his erratic behavior that they demanded he enter a hospital for psychiatric treatment.

Their concern had been spiking for weeks in tandem with the Oregon Democrat’s increasingly unpredictable performance on the campaign trail and in private. He was loud and sometimes angry, some of them told The Oregonian. He said kooky things to staff and — more worrisome with a tough election fast approaching — around potential voters and donors.

Most of all, they were worried for Wu, a 55-year-old single father of two children.

Earlier and gentler efforts had failed, so the tight-knit group of high-level staff took other steps, including quiet inquiries about the availability of beds in hospitals in Portland and Washington, D.C., multiple sources familiar with the effort told The Oregonian.

Several staff members confronted Wu for the final time on Oct. 30. Wu’s psychiatrist was brought into that meeting as well, joining the group at the Portland campaign headquarters by speaker phone. The meeting was held after four consecutive days of troubling behavior that led the staff to agree that Wu needed a higher level of medical care, according to people intimately familiar with the events of that period.

“This is way beyond acceptable levels and the charade needs to end NOW,” wrote Lisa Grove, a senior and long-serving campaign pollster, in an e-mail to colleagues that day. “No enabling by any potential enablers, he needs help and you need to be protected. Nothing else matters right now. Nothing else.”

Wu, however, remained defiant, sources said. He left the meeting and said he was going to a movie.

Faced with a stalemate, the campaign essentially shut down at the very time when most other candidates were at their most frenzied. No public announcement was made, but campaign staff withdrew and Wu did not hold another formal campaign event until he emerged on Tuesday night after winning a seventh term.

Last month, The Oregonian reported that at least a half-dozen members of Wu’s staff had resigned after he won re-election in November. That group included his longtime chief of staff and his spokeswoman. In addition, he lost his campaign pollster and his fundraiser.

Wu declined to be interviewed for that story, and he declined to be interviewed for this one, despite multiple attempts by The Oregonian to reach him. He rushed away from a reporter after a speech on the U.S. House floor on Friday.

Late Friday his office sent a prepared statement. In it he said that he was “not always at my best with staff or constituents” and that he sought “professional medical care.”

“Some of my stress was derived from a very tough campaign, but I was also dealing with raising two children alone and the death of my father,” he wrote.

“I fully acknowledge that I could have dealt with these difficult circumstances better, and I remain focused on being a good father to my children and a strong representative for the people of Oregon,” the statement said.

This account is based on The Oregonian’s interviews with multiple sources who worked for his congressional office, his campaign, and in some cases, both. Each had detailed knowledge of campaign events and the rippling concern about Wu. The people interviewed are still working in politics in Washington and in Oregon, and talked on the condition that they not be named. Together, they offer a consistent and independent account, backed up by e-mails, that reveals serious and expanding concerns about Wu’s deteriorating condition in the last days before the election.

Beginning of the end

For some staffers, the beginning of the end was Wednesday, Oct. 27, when Wu delivered a belligerent and rambling 19-minute monologue to Washington County Democrats that some in the audience said was inappropriate for the friendly crowd. His behavior left staff members aghast.

That Thursday, on a downtown Portland sidewalk in front of Central Drugs, several staff members pleaded with him to get into their car for a private intervention. Wu refused and took off on foot. His campaign staff could only watch helplessly, afraid what their candidate might say or do.

They returned to the campaign office and sent the few remaining people home. He later called in his employees and reprimanded them for blowing things out of proportion and accused the predominantly female staff of being overly emotional, sources told The Oregonian.

On Friday, Oct. 29, Wu attended a fundraiser at which U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius was the featured guest. Wu tried to get Sebelius to talk to his children on his cell phone.

That evening, he talked his way through security at Portland International Airport in order to meet his young children at the gate, only to solicit votes from passengers as his kids skipped ahead, according to a report filed with Port of Portland police. Later, the duty manager was reprimanded for letting Wu past the security checkpoint.

In the early morning of Saturday, several odd messages written from Wu’s private House of Representatives e-mail address were sent to some staffers, all female, with still others copied on them.

One message was written in the name and voice of Wu’s son. “Cut him some slack, man. What he does when he’s wasted is send emails, not harass people he works with.”

Yet another was purportedly signed by both children, who are adolescents. It praised the female staffer for sticking by Wu. “My Dad says you’re the best because not even my Mom put up with him for [REDACTED: #] years and you have. We think you’re cool.”

Aides with knowledge of the messages told The Oregonian they were convinced all were written by David Wu. The messages were sent from his BlackBerry around 1:30 a.m. Moreover, the private e-mail address of a member of Congress is closely guarded and it would be highly unusual for another person other than the elected official to have access to the account.

Wu also forwarded a cheery photo of himself dressed as a tiger for Halloween. He had both hands — paws — held up to either side of his face. He was grinning broadly.

At that point, staff knew something was terribly wrong with their candidate. That Saturday, Oct. 30, they checked for available hospital beds and consulted with his psychiatrist. Veteran pollster Grove sent staffers the e-mail that signaled the end. She declined to comment for this story but earlier told The Oregonian that she would never work for Wu again.

There was no doubt Wu was having a rough 2010. He had separated from his wife, and he faced a credible opponent — Republican Rob Cornilles — in a difficult year for all Democrats. He told people he had stopped drinking in July.

But staffers and others who encountered Wu say his behavior that fall was not an ordinary response to stress. As the campaign wore on, they said, Wu became unpredictable and sometimes loopy, saying the wrong thing at the wrong time and often not making sense. Nor would he own up to their concerns.

Campaign staffers were seeing an entirely different picture of the campaign than the public. Upbeat Facebook feeds under Wu’s name, written by his communications team, appeared on the campaign’s website. They bore little similarity to real life within the campaign, which by then had split largely into two — Wu and the rest of staff.

He made few campaign appearances and near the end of the campaign was even placed under what one campaign official characterized as “house arrest.” A spokesman disputed that, saying Wu went to a football game that Saturday and on other errands and activities through the weekend.

Previous erratic behavior

Wu had shown signs of erratic behavior before. In 2007, he accused the Bush White House of acting like fake Klingons. In 2003, he appeared to go catatonic before a crucial vote on Medicare.

Sources reported that over the years Wu would have normal periods, followed by times when he seemed disturbed. Each episode seemed more erratic, they said. But just before the election, they said, was the worst they had seen.

As Election Day approached, the prevailing mood, according to one person, “was that the only thing worse than losing the campaign would be winning it.”

Voters saw none of the turmoil within the campaign. On Sunday, Oct. 31, Wu’s Facebook page thanked “incredible volunteers” for knocking on doors to get out the vote.

On election night, as returns were tallied, Wu’s staff posted a final message on his page.

“In a year of hard-fought contests, my race was no exception. I am humbled by the confidence that Oregonians continue to place in me and grateful for all the volunteers, staff, and friends who have stood by my side throughout this campaign. Thank you for your support!”

Wu had been elected to a seventh term in Congress.

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State hospital won’t have room for Daniel Butts for several weeks

Posted by admin2 on 18th February 2011

Daniel Butts

Daniel Butts

From the TDN.com, February 18, 2011

It could be mid-March before the Kalama man accused of murdering Rainier Police Chief Ralph Painter is sent to a state hospital for a mental evaluation, officials said Friday.

Daniel Armaugh Butts, 21, is being held in the Columbia County Jail awaiting transfer to the Oregon State Hospital in Salem. The order to transfer Butts for a mental evaluation was signed by Circuit Court Judge Ted Grove on Feb. 11.

Butt’s lawyers said at the time he needed immediate treatment for what they called a mental breakdown. The court order was to transfer Butts as soon as possible.

Officials at the hospital have advised jail officials that they don’t have room for Butts just yet, Columbia County Jeff Dickerson said Friday.

The hospital didn’t have an exact date, but officials there told jail officials they “envisioned the middle of March as when they’d have room,” Dickerson said.

Once at the hospital, the evaluation could take up to 30 days, according to Columbia County District Attorney Steve Atchison. Butts’ arraignment and trial on 24 charges — including aggravated murder — are on hold pending the outcome of the exam. A Jan. 26 arraignment had to be called off after Butts interrupted the reading of the charges, disagreed with his lawyers and complained jail guards were making too much noise.

Defense lawyers have declined to speak with the press about the case or their client.

The exam ordered for Butts will evaluate only whether he is stable enough to assist with his defense as his lawyers prepare for trial. It is not a determination about his mental state during the Jan. 5 shooting or whether he’s responsible for his alleged actions.

His lawyers, in court papers, say doctors have found that Butts is hearing voices and is likely bipolar and experiencing a mental break. The evaluation — done by state doctors — is to see if the alleged mental problems are inhibiting Butts’ ability to work with his lawyers.

If he is found to be mentally impaired, Butts would be treated in the state’s forensic psychiatric services unit until he is fit to go to trial and then would be returned to Columbia County to face the charges.

Butts is charged with killing Painter, 55, Jan. 5 after the chief responded to a report of a suspicious person outside a West Rainier car stereo shop. According to grand jury indictment, Butts assaulted Painter, took his pistol and shot him in the head.

Butts also is accused of firing at other police officers as they responded to the scene and of shooting at a nearby church before he was shot and taken into custody. A bullet remains in Butts’ back, and he’s receiving medical treatment in jail.

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Eyes & Ears – February 2011

Posted by admin2 on 16th February 2011

Here’s the February 2011 edition of Eyes & Ears, a mental health consumer run newsletter for consumers, their friends & family and mental health professionals.

Download and read the February 2011 issue at:

Online Reading Version of Eyes & Ears – with links
Full article version of Eyes & Ears – for printing

Contact the editor at eyes.ears@cascadiabhc.org

Included in this issue:

* Art at NorthStar – NorthStar wants you to join their art program
* Bipartisan Mental Health Caucus to Focus on Budget Cuts
* Fundraiser for Alien Boy: the Death and Life of James Chasse
* OSH patients lobby for speedier discharges
* Names of those whose cremains were abandoned at the state hospital are now online
* Multnomah County Community Budget Forums
* Energy Assistance Program numbers
* Extra on the online version with links: News articles on homelessness, police training and more
* Free Yoga; Mental Health Day with consumer art exhibit at Salem; NAMI Smarts Consumer Advocacy Workshop; and more

Besides other news there are a variety of listings of meetings, services, support groups, job opportunities and more.

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Keeping our cops clean and sober

Posted by admin2 on 16th February 2011

Guest Editorial published in The Oregonian, February 16, 2011

Come July, Portland police officers will have some extra spending money in their paychecks, but their new contract with the city actually includes something far more valuable. For some, it’s a chance at a new life.

The “treatment-first” option packaged with random drug testing in the contract means officers with alcohol or drug addiction will get help, not punishment. This is a substantive move that benefits the officers, their families and friends, and every one of us who looks to them for safety and protection.

Punishment and discipline for people with addiction and mental health issues are well-worn paths to secret-keeping and evasion. Drug tests without the option for treatment simply lead to better secret-keeping. Treatment works, and it should be available to everyone who needs it — including police.

Alcoholism and drug addiction are medical disorders, not matters for shame, any more than cancer or an allergy to peanuts. It’s been 72 years since the co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous introduced a novel idea: “No man should be fired just because he is alcoholic. If he wants to stop, he should be afforded a real chance.” Almost 40 years ago, the disease concept was written into Oregon law. And like it or not, about one in 10 of us is born with the predisposition for a drug or alcohol problem. That includes the men and women who serve on the police force.

But officers have the added burden of a risky, stressful job. They also have guns.

Our officers must be the emblem of truth and trust — whether it’s with their kids, a judge and jury, or with a lawbreaker. With the new contract, the Portland Police Association and the city of Portland have created a terrific incentive for truth-telling and trust-building.

We know how to treat addiction. We know what works and what doesn’t work. We know the costs of not providing treatment. We know the pain and suffering someone with addiction can cause without skilled help.

Auto accidents, domestic violence, employee theft, debt, child abuse, physical, mental and spiritual damage — all are typical with untreated addicts. But what worries many addicted officers most is the prospective damage they may do to their spouses and kids. Especially the kids. Police officers have a greater risk of domestic violence and higher suicide rates than the general population. Both harm kids, and both are fueled by addiction.

Addiction can be devastating, even life-threatening. But with treatment, it’s entirely controllable. It’s our responsibility to provide treatment, and treatment that works — especially to those who provide so much to us.

Remember: Police officers are all human. Just like us, they are all fallible, mortal beings. Just like us, they sometimes misuse alcohol and drugs. And now, sometimes, those officers will fail a random drug test.

Instead of being surprised when this happens, instead of pointing a finger of judgment, instead of declaring them menaces, let’s make sure they get the care they need. Inside every intervention is the light of opportunity, and inside every addict there is hope.

Instead of saying, “she failed her drug test,” let’s offer a prayer of thanksgiving: “We arrived before the worst happened, before the addiction was out of control. Now we can help.” And help means providing effective, outcome-driven treatment for addiction regardless of the drug — whether it’s lorazepam or heroin, whether it’s a case of beer or a snort of methamphetamine.

Keeping our cops clean and sober will make Portland safer – and in the process, turn some lives around.

Jason Renaud and Jenny Westberg are board members of the Mental Health Association of Portland.

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