Jamycheal Mitchell: Mentally Ill, Criminalized, and Killed by the System

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Stories like the one of Jamycheal Mitchell, the 24-year-old young man who was found dead in his jail cell on August 19, are particularly hard to hear. What the police ruled “natural causes” turned out to be that he starved to death. The crime? Shoplifting. Mitchell, who had a severe mental illness had been ruled permanently disabled and was unable to work. In April, he stole a zebra cake, a Snickers, and Mountain Dew from a local 7-11 in Portsmouth, Virginia. It would be a month before he ever went before a judge. A judge then ruled him incompetent to stand trial. He should have been transported to a local mental health facility, but he wasn’t. Apparently there wasn’t …

Stories like the one of Jamycheal Mitchell, the 24-year-old young man who was found dead in his jail cell on August 19, are particularly hard to hear. What the police ruled “natural causes” turned out to be that he starved to death. The crime? Shoplifting. Mitchell, who had a severe mental illness had been ruled permanently disabled and was unable to work. In April, he stole a zebra cake, a Snickers, and Mountain Dew from a local 7-11 in Portsmouth, Virginia. It would be a month before he ever went before a judge. A judge then ruled him incompetent to stand trial. He should have been transported to a local mental health facility, but he wasn’t. Apparently there wasn’t one that had room for him. Three months later, the 6’3″ 180lbs Mitchell was found dead in his cell. No meds had ever been administered. He had never made it to a mental health facility. He had lost nearly 80 pounds from refusal to eat. All for less than $5 worth of snacks he stole while in a mental health crisis.

There are more than 300,000 inmates in American prisons that are diagnosed with mental illness. Meanwhile, there are only around 30,000 mentally ill patients in psychiatric facilities throughout the country. If that number is staggering to you, it should be. America is “treating” mental illness through incarceration — and the price we are paying as a country is enormous. That’s why Brave New Films is releasing a new film series entitled This is Crazy: Criminalizing Mental Health (Part 2 available above) to open dialogue about what needs to be done to start treating mental illness as a health issue, not a crime.

The state of our mental health care system is nothing short of a public health crisis. The privatization of mental health care by the Reagan administration made access to mental health care a high price luxury as opposed to a basic human need. And thus, mental health issues are largely ignored and untreated, particularly in minority and low-income communities. The privatization of mental health happened almost simultaneously to the privatization of prisons. No coincidence.

What happens when, like any medical condition, mental illness rears its symptoms? Without community mental health programs, police become the first responders to everything from psychotic breaks to schizophrenic episodes. What should be immediately treated as a welfare issue and medical crisis for the individual experiencing the problem becomes criminal threats and illegal behavior, punishable by imprisonment – or sometimes, death. It is without doubt that the profit made from Jamychael and others like him being in that prison bed far outweighed the humanity of allowing a suffering man to be treated. In many cases, his infraction would have allowed for him to be released to family, or transported directly to a mental health facility. But without a national template for how we treat people suffering from mental illness, how it is dealt with is determined precinct by precinct.

Unlike the Virginia case, many diagnosed with a mental illness receive the first treatment they have ever received in prison. But not without also being abused, neglected, and often put into solitary confinement (exasperating their condition). Guards and policeman, untrained in Crisis Intervention Training (CIT) or other mental health diversion, see their symptoms as non-compliance, not as something completely out of the person’s control until they receive meds or other treatment. Sadly, while prisons provide continual triggers and violence, they are also one of the only places people with untreated mental illness have to go other than the streets. Upon release, medications and access to medications cease, and the mentally ill are left on their own. With confusing conditions of supervised release and no meds, recidivism for the mentally ill is extremely high.

This is inhumane. This is profiting off of human suffering. This must stop.

Many police departments across the nation have adopted CIT training to train officers on how to be first responders to calls involving mentally ill people. They arrive in plain clothes. They do not use their command voice as they are taught in the Academy. They have learned to de-escalate the situation without use of force when they were non-violent. Moreover, they don’t take the individual to jail. They take them to mental health facilities, in some places, facilities that have been created specifically for this purpose.

The outcome would shock you. Precincts were spending over $600,000 in overtime pay having to wait with individuals at the hospital for psychological evaluations. Taxpayers saved money by spending on average $350 for diversion programs per incident versus $2300 when jailing a mentally ill person. San Antonio alone saved $50 million dollars over the first five years of implementation of CIT/Diversion programs. That was including building and staffing the facilities. And of course, there is the ability to save, rather than destroy, a human life. Like in the case of Jamychael Mitchell

As long as mental health care and prisons stay privatized, making mental illness a costly luxury for the rich and punishable by law for the middle class and poor, they will keep corporations’ pockets lined. The illusion that is presented — that treating the mentally ill with state and community centers will cost taxpayers — is simply untrue, and in fact time and time again SAVES taxpayers’ millions of dollars.

That’s why cities like New York and Los Angeles and organizations across the country are fighting back. Mayor DeBlasio is launching, with the help of New York nonprofits, a task force to combat the criminalization of mentally ill people. The proposed plan includes CIT training for officers, centers that police can take people suffering from mental illness to, instead of taking them to jail, and much better coordination of medication management. This plan will save New Yorkers millions over time. Most importantly, it could save some of New York’s most vulnerable citizens from being victims of systematic abuse of the poor and those with mental illness.

Los Angeles County, with its largest local criminal justice system in the country, has recently announced spending $120 million to create a new Office of Diversion and Re-Entry focused on treatment and alternatives to incarceration for mentally ill people. That investment will return huge dividends in human and financial capital.

Watch the Brave New Films three-part series This Is Crazy: Criminalizing Mental Health, with new episodes released weekly, and see for yourself just how important it is to fix this problem.

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Jamycheal Mitchell: Mentally Ill, Criminalized, and Killed by the System