Involuntary Commitment for the Mentally Ill
In the movie, "Michael Clayton," Arthur, a bipolar lawyer, is lead
council representing UNorth, a company fighting a $3 billion
class-action lawsuit against one of its products. Before a deposition
in Wisconsin, Arthur stops taking his medicine, falls in love with one
of the plaintiffs, and engages in alarming behavior, which lands him in
a Wisconsin jail.
Michael Clayton comes to get him out. It seems Arthur has found
irrefutable, incriminating evidence against the firm he's supposed to
represent and is pursuing it. Without medicine, his conscience found
freedom. Clayton doesn't give up pleading. "How do I talk to you
Arthur, so you hear me, like a child, like a nut, like everything’s
fine? What’s the secret? Because I need you to hear me."
Arthur’s answer was extraordinary, a moment of pure clarity that emerged as unexpectedly as a rare orchid..
Arthur says, "Michael, I have great affection for you, and you lead a
very rich and interesting life, but you’re a bag man and not an
attorney, if your intention was to have me committed, you should have
kept me in Wisconsin, where the arrest report, the videotape, and
eyewitness accounts of inappropriate behavior would have had
jurisdictional relevance. I have no criminal record in the state of New
York, and the single, determining criterion for involuntary
incarceration is danger. Is the defendant a danger to himself or
others. You think you got the horses for that? Well good luck, and God
bless, but I tell you this, the last place you want to see me is in
court."
He was right. However, all bipolar people are not brilliant lawyers, and life is not a movie.
In a study done by the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law,
approximately 250,000 people with severe mental illnesses are
incarcerated at any one time. Most receive no treatment beyond
medication. "A Chicago study of thousands of police encounters found
that 47 percent of people with a mental illness were arrested, while
only 28 percent of individuals without a mental illness were arrested
for the same behavior."
For those who are alone with their disease; who are poor; whose
families tried, failed, or ran away; who can't get through the
bureaucracy; jail seems to be where they end up.
References:
Michael Clayton, movie scene transcription
http://www.bazelon.org/issues/criminalization/publications/mentalhealthcourts
Tags: bipolar-disorder, mental-illness, involuntary-commitment, michael-clayton
Share