Public defenders
Defense attorneys across Pennsylvania told Spotlight PA and PINJ the state competency system is so broken, they routinely avoid it.
In Philadelphia, attorneys at the Defender Association of Philadelphia, a public firm that provides no-cost legal counsel, can do so because they have a strong working relationship with the city’s district attorney, Norristown State Hospital, and the courts.
These connections help them avoid trapping people with minor charges in the criminal system.
Gregg Blender, formerly the head of the firm’s mental health unit, recently represented a woman who police repeatedly arrested for breaking into a residential home, a potentially serious offense.
“That sounds horrible, except the house was abandoned, it was being rehabbed, and … that was her childhood home,” Blender said. “And she kept going back to it because she believed she still lived there.”
Instead of requesting a competency evaluation, the firm worked with the Philadelphia prosecutor to drop the charges, an option Blender admits isn’t feasible everywhere.
The Defender Association has done training for public defenders in other counties, but without the same level of resources or relationships, their system is difficult to replicate.
“They look at us like we have two heads. ‘That will never work here,’” Blender said. “We hear that.”
Jails
In response to a Spotlight PA and PINJ survey, jail leaders across the state said that while arrest and incarceration have become the de facto resource for people experiencing mental health crises, the facilities are largely unable to provide proper care for these people once they arrive.
If the person’s mental health condition interferes with their ability to stand trial, the leaders said, they can languish for weeks if not months waiting for one of less than 400 state hospital beds designated for competency restoration treatment.
In Allegheny County, where the problem is particularly acute, the jail and the local human resources department have plans to create a “mobile competency restoration and support team.”
The team would provide treatment outside the state hospitals and cut down on the amount of time people remain incarcerated for mental health issues.
The county issued a request for proposals in October and closed submissions from interested contractors in December, but received no bids, according to county spokesperson Amie Downs.
“They have revised it and expect to issue that revised solicitation in the coming weeks,” Downs said.
The new team would provide treatment in the “least restrictive care setting, with a focus on community based interventions whenever possible,” according to the request for proposals.
“Any period of incarceration is detrimental to an individual’s health and wellness,” the request for proposals reads. “It severs important connections to community, natural supports and service providers, and periods of incarceration can result in isolation, trauma and increased mental health needs.”
In other county jails, officials coping with extended wait times for state hospitals have proposed in-jail clinics or therapeutic services.
Last year, York County approved a study examining the feasibility of building a competency restoration clinic inside the jail after officials discovered two men had been waiting for a state hospital bed for 1,000 days. During a prison board meeting March 13, York Warden Adam Ogle said officials are reviewing a draft of the feasibility study, according to the York Dispatch.
In Beaver County, similar issues with lengthy wait times prompted jail leaders to bring a health contractor to the jail to provide competency restoration, according to Warden William Schouppe.
But experts have warned against any solution that relies on in-jail mental health care.
In Tennessee, Nashville’s county jail opened a behavioral health center aimed at treating incarcerated people whose charges likely stemmed from mental health issues. Diverting the people to these beds is better than having them in jail, said Christopher Slobogin, director of Vanderbilt Law School’s Criminal Justice Program.
But the Nashville facility still funnels people through the criminal system.
“That’s a criminal solution,” he said. “The civil solution would be you have communal health centers. They conceivably could have small, inpatient capacity. But the ideal would be outpatient treatment, primarily.”
Spotlight PA is an independent, non-partisan newsroom powered by The Philadelphia Inquirer in partnership with PennLive/The Patriot-News, TribLIVE/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and WITF Public Media.