Psych Crime Reporter

August 21, 2012

Virginia psych hospital deprives ex-Marine of Constitutional and human rights over FB posts

Filed under: involuntary commitment,psychiatric hospital or facility — Psych Crime Reporter @ 8:46 pm

RICHMOND, Va. — A former Marine involuntarily detained for psychiatric evaluation for posting strident anti-government messages on Facebook has received an outpouring of support from people who say authorities are trampling on his First Amendment rights.

Brandon J. Raub, 26, has been in custody since FBI, Secret Service agents and police in Virginia’s Chesterfield County questioned him Thursday evening (August 16) about what they said were ominous posts talking about a coming revolution. In one message earlier this month according to authorities, Raub wrote: “Sharpen my axe; I’m here to sever heads.”

Police – acting under a state law that allows emergency, temporary psychiatric commitments upon the recommendation of a mental health professional – took Raub to the John Randolph Medical Center in Hopewell. He was not charged with any crime.

A Virginia-based civil liberties group, The Rutherford Institute, dispatched one of its attorneys to the hospital to represent Raub at a hearing Monday. A judge ordered Raub detained for another month, Rutherford executive director John Whitehead said.

“For government officials to not only arrest Brandon Raub for doing nothing more than exercising his First Amendment rights but to actually force him to undergo psychological evaluations and detain him against his will goes against every constitutional principle this country was founded upon,” Whitehead said.

Raub’s mother, Cathleen Thomas, said by telephone that the government had overstepped its bounds.

“The bottom line is his freedom of speech has been violated,” she said.

Thomas said her son, who served tours as a combat engineer in Iraq and Afghanistan, is “concerned about all the wars we’ve experienced” and believes the U.S. government was complicit in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. One of his Facebook posts, she said, pictured the gaping hole in the Pentagon and asked “where’s the plane?”

Whitehead said he found nothing alarming in Raub’s social media commentaries. “The posts I read that supposedly were of concern were libertarian-type posts I see all the time,” he said.

The big concern, Whitehead said, is whether government officials are monitoring citizens’ private Facebook pages and detaining people with whom they disagree.

Dee Rybiski, an FBI spokeswoman in Richmond, said there was no Facebook snooping by her agency.

“We received quite a few complaints about what were perceived as threatening posts,” she said. “Given the circumstances with the things that have gone on in the country with some of these mass shootings, it would be horrible for law enforcement not to pay attention to complaints.”

Whitehead said some of the posts in question were made on a closed Facebook page that Raub had recently created so he questioned whether anyone from the public would have complained about them.

“Support Brandon Raub” Facebook pages have drawn significant interest, and other Internet sites had numerous comments from people outraged by the veteran’s detention.

Raub’s supporters characterized the detention as an arrest, complaining he was handcuffed and whisked away in a police cruiser without being served a warrant or read his rights. But authorities say it wasn’t an arrest because Raub doesn’t face criminal charges.

Col. Thierry Dupuis, the county police chief, said Raub was taken into custody upon the recommendation of mental health crisis intervention workers. He said the action was taken under the state’s emergency custody statute, which allows a magistrate to order the civil detention and psychiatric evaluation of a person who is considered potentially dangerous.

He said Raub was handcuffed because he resisted officers’ attempts to take him into custody.

Source: Larry O’Dell, “Brandon J. Raub, Former Marine, Detained After Anti-Government Facebook Postings,” Huffington Post, August 20, 2012.

Gag order lifted on identity of psychiatrist who was banned for sexual advances on patient

Filed under: psychiatrist,sexual abuse,sexual exploitation — Psych Crime Reporter @ 8:45 pm

The identity of a psychiatrist struck off for making inappropriate sexual advances against a vulnerable patient can now be revealed.

The ACT [Australian Capital Territory] Civil and Administrative Tribunal this week lifted a long-standing gag-order on the name of Hugh Victor Veness.

The move comes after a push from the ACT Government Solicitor’s office and the patient, who publicly called for the order to be lifted.

Earlier this year the tribunal found Dr Veness was ”not in a fit and proper state to continue practice as a psychiatrist”.

It cancelled his registration, banning him from reapplying to practice until authorities say otherwise. But the non-publication order, granted by Tribunal general president Linda Crebbin in 2010, prevented The Canberra Times and other media from naming the doctor.

An order still protects the identity of the patient, who last night said her ”heart lifted” at the news the doctor could be named.

”I’m relieved, I’m happy, it’s been a 2½-year struggle at my own emotional cost, to push through and push through,” she said. The allegations stemmed from late 2009, when Dr Veness arrived at her house and presented her with a script for the addictive psychoactive drug Xanax.

The doctor also propositioned her, telling her he had developed feelings and wanted to have a relationship.

In a subsequent phone call he allegedly told her, ”I love you [name], it won’t just be sex, it will be the real thing, a relationship”. She was hospitalised several months later after an apparent overdose of alcohol and Xanax.

The tribunal said the psychiatrist’s actions fell short of the conduct expected of him.

During the hearing, an expert witness, Michael Diamond, said Dr Veness’ actions showed ”predatory, exploitative and self-serving traits”.

But another witness said Dr Diamond’s report was ”unbalanced, brutal and lacks compassion”.

Dr Veness has previously held positions with the ACT branch of the Australian Medical Association, and with the local arm of the Royal Australia and New Zealand College of Psychiatry. But his registration was suspended last year in light of the proceedings against him.

It was not the first time Dr Veness’ professional conduct had come under scrutiny. It came to light during a coronial inquiry that he had previously been the subject of a medical board complaint raised by a former lover, psychologist Tania Lioulios.

It was alleged that Dr Veness inappropriately prescribed large amounts of the potentially addictive drug Oxycontin to Ms Lioulios. However, it does not appear that any adverse findings were made against Dr Veness. In 2008 Ms Lioulios took her own life in the back of a Corrective Services van which was taking her from the ACT Magistrates Court to the Belconnen Remand Centre. An inquest into the death excluded the canvassing of any allegations of impropriety in the relationship between the two.

Source: Louis Andrews, “Struck-off psychiatrist revealed,” Canberra Times, August 17, 2012.

UK psych nurse struck off for patient abuse

Filed under: elder abuse,patient abuse,psychiatric nurse — Psych Crime Reporter @ 8:44 pm

A NURSE who was aggressive to patients at an East Lancashire mental health unit – and hurled abuse at them – has been struck off.

In one episode Iain Fletcher, a staff nurse at Hillview unit, Royal Blackburn Hospital , interrupted colleagues and patients preparing a Christmas hamper and told them it was ‘tat’, the Nursing and Midwifery Council heard.

Hampers were being created to raise funds for the ward and Fletcher’s behaviour ‘was wholly inappropriate’, a fitness to practise panel was told.

Fletcher also indulged in a foul-mouthed rant about how he enjoyed restraining problem patients, the disciplinary hearing was told.

And he carried on regardless when ward sister Cath Rigg warned him about his language, which was peppered with F-words.

Fletcher denied several of the allegations at an internal hearing, conducted by Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the unit.

But he failed to attend the NMC hearing and a three-strong panel ruled that three main charges against him were found proven.

NMC counsel Moloney said Fletcher had returned to work after a lengthy absence and was on a trial placement in the 18-bed Ward L3 which deals with older adults with conditions such as depression and bipolar disorder.

One woman, named as Patient A, who suffered from bipolar disorder, was in the ward dining area when she began repeatedly washing her hands.

Fletcher said to her: ‘Have you finished with your OCDs?’ Later in the presence of the same patient he told a colleague: ‘All the people that are a pain should be shoved in PICU’.

This was a reference to the psychiatric intensive care ward, which colleagues felt was an ‘awful’ thing to say to a patient, the hearing was told.

Panel chairman Alexander Coleman said Fletcher had a ‘woeful lack of interpersonal skills’.

He added: “The panel found Mr Fletcher used his authority as a nurse in a bullying and dictatorial manner which distressed patients and staff.”

Source: Peter Magill, “East Lancashire nurse struck off for abuse of patients,” Lancashire Telegraph, August 16, 2012.

State seeks to yank William Ayres’ license for dementia (though prosecutor gets retrial on accusation that he’s faking dementia)

Filed under: child molestation,psychiatrist — Psych Crime Reporter @ 8:43 pm

On August 8, 2012, the Medical Board of California issued an Accusation against San Mateo child psychiatrist William Ayres, seeking to revoke or suspend his medical license on the basis that he is suffering from dementia and so is unfit to practice. This is both ironic and just.

Ayres was tried in criminal court in 2009 on nine counts of performing lewd acts on seven boys he counseled in the early-to-mid 90s. That trial ended in a hung jury but the district attorney decided within months to retry the case. Ayres is suspected of molesting more than 30 boys in his career as a child psychiatrist. Most of those charges however are beyond the statute of limitations.

Before he could be tried again, his defense brought up the issue of competency. Ayres’ June 2011 competency hearing ended in mistrial as jurors could not agree on whether he would be able to assist in his own defense. He was remanded to Napa State Hospital, a psychiatric facility, and remained there for nine months. However, based on the contents of a sealed report from Napa doctors, prosecutors now allege that Ayres used his knowledge of psychiatry to fake the symptoms of dementia and to mislead court-appointed doctors.

It is not likely that the 80-year-old Ayres, who is former president of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, will ever practice again, the but irony of claiming to have dementia and then being exposed as having faked it…and then losing your license because of a lie. Well, that’s poetic justice.

News stories reported Ayres having been observed lucidly conversing in a restaurant with his wife and companions, obviously not suffering from dementia. A private investigator on the case shot surveillance video of this, which is posted on YouTube here and here.

Judge John Grandsaert ordered that Ayres remain in custody without bail in San Mateo County Jail while awaiting his competency retrial on October 1st.

Ayres was ordered to cease and desist the practice of medicine in April 2007 when the molestation charges started mounting against him. However, the state never issued a final decision. The Accusation issued on August 8 is the first step toward a final decision.

August 14, 2012

State temporarily suspends license of accused pimp psychologist

Filed under: crime and fraud,psychologist — Psych Crime Reporter @ 9:03 pm

An Exeter psychologist charged with running a prostitution operation out of his Portsmouth apartment has had his license temporarily suspended by the New Hampshire Board of Mental Health.

Alexander Marino, 38, of 565 Sagamore Ave., in Portsmouth is currently free on bail following his arrest for allowing his apartment in Sagamore Court to be used for prostitution. But until Monday, he was free to keep treating patients.

Peggy Lynch, the board’s administrative assistant, said the board has scheduled a review hearing with Marino at Merrimack County Superior Court in Concord on Aug. 27 to determine if his license to practice psychiatry in New Hampshire will remain suspended or be re-instated as his criminal case proceeds through the court system.

The hearing is scheduled to take place a 2:30 p.m., according to Lynch.

According to a letter issued by the board, Marino was granted his license to practice mental health care in New Hampshire on Dec. 3, 2010 and has a licensed clinical psychological practice on 24 Front St. in Exeter.

Assistant Attorney General Jason Reimers will serve as the board’s hearing counsel for the Aug. 27 court proceedings, according to the board’s letter.

According to Portsmouth Police, Marino was using his apartment to run a prostitution operation with links to Manchester and Portland, Maine since October. Police said men would arrive at Sagamore Court, hang out a the pool and enter Marino’s apartment with an assortment of scantilly-clad women to receive services.

Marino, Brooke Parent, 21, of Manchester, and Jim Parra, 22, of Kittery, Maine, were all charged with prostitution following a police investigation on Aug. 4. Marino turned himself into Portsmouth Police on Aug. 7 after an arrest warrant was issued. Marino, Parent and Parra are scheduled to be arraigned in Portsmouth Circuit Court on Oct. 1. and Marino remains free after posting $1,000 cash bail and $15,000 personal recognizance.

Source: Robert Cook, “Exeter Psychologist Has License Temporarily Suspended,” Portsmouth Patch, August 14, 2012.

Psychologist Christopher M. Allen surrenders license under investigation for sex with client

Filed under: psychologist,sexual abuse,sexual exploitation — Psych Crime Reporter @ 9:02 pm

On May 2, 2012, psychologist Christopher M. Allen surrendered his license to the Oregon Board of Psychologist Examiners while under investigation.

According to the Board’s stipulated order, Allen provided psychotherapist to a female client (Client A) who was referred to Allen by her boyfriend (Client B). During therapy with Client A, Allen made inappropriate self-disclosures to her and displayed poor judgment by continuing to see Client A during a time when he reported feeling strong attraction toward her.

During their last session, he told her that he had previously terminated a 10-year relationship with his partner. Allen met with Client A the next day and commenced a sexual relationship with her that lasted more than two years.

Allen terminated Client B’s therapy prior to commencing the sexual relationship with Client B’s girlfriend (Client A). Allen never discussed with his residency supervisor any issues of transference with Client A or his feelings for Client A.

Allen is prohibited from applying for a license to practice psychology for a minimum of two years.

Source: Stipulated Order in the Matter of the License to Practice as a Psychologist of Christopher Mark Allen, Ph.D., Agency No. OBPE 2010-069, Oregon Board of Psychologist Examiners.

Texas counselor Larry Etter surrenders license following child sex crime conviction

Filed under: child molestation,mental health counselor — Psych Crime Reporter @ 9:01 pm

On April 20, 2012, the Texas Department of State Health Services Board of Counseling accepted the voluntary surrender of counselor Larry Etter’s license based on his criminal conviction.

On March 6, 2012, Etter was sentenced to 10 years in prison, having  pleaded guilty to 22 counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child.

Etter met the victim of his assaults when he was counseling her father. He sexually assaulted her for ten years, from the time she was eight years old.

Etter also neglected to report the filing of criminal charges against him to the Board.

State disciplines psychotherapist Nikole Ahner Brown for involvement with client

Filed under: boundary violation,psychotherapist — Psych Crime Reporter @ 8:59 pm

On October 6, 2011, the Idaho Board of Professional Counselors and Marriage & Family Therapists placed licensed marriage & family therapist Nikole Ahner Brown on two years supervised probation with terms and conditions.

The Board’s document states that Brown established a relationship with a former client which was not in the client’s best interest. This relationship included co-ownership of a vehicle, payment of the former client’s phone bill, a landlord-tenant relationship and a personal relationship.

The terms of Brown’s probation also include a $1,000 fine and reimbursement to the Board of $3,643 for its investigative costs and attorney fees.

Source: Stipulation and Consent Order in the Matter of the License of Nikole Ahner Brown, License No. LMFT-3085, Case No. COU-2010-18.

State suspends license of mental health counselor Ronald Ray Jones

Filed under: boundary violation,mental health counselor — Psych Crime Reporter @ 8:59 pm

On February 29, 2012, the Idaho Board of Professional Counselors and Marriage & Family Therapists suspended the license of professional counselor Ronald Ray Jones for one month, followed by one year of probation with conditions.

The Board’s Order states that in approximately May 2007, Jones began providing counseling services to a female client and her son and that Jones allegedly engaged in boundary violations with the client.

Though Jones denied the allegations of boundary violations, he acknowledged that he could have done a better job of recording and documenting various meetings and contact with the client.

Source: Stipulation and Consent Order in the Matter of the License of Ronald Ray Jones, License No. LPC-3560, Case No. COU-2011-8.

Idaho mental health counselor David Reynolds surrenders license

Filed under: mental health counselor — Psych Crime Reporter @ 8:58 pm

On January 5, 2012, the Idaho Board of Professional Counselors and Marriage & Family Therapists accepted the surrender of counselor David Reynolds’ license.

According the Board’s Consent Order, Reynolds was terminated by his employer due to his failure to provide appropriate care for clients.

Reynolds was late for or missed appointments on several occasions and failed to adequately communicate with his client. He also failed to keep accurate and timely records of the care he provided.

The document indicates that Reynolds attributed his failure to provide appropriate care, etc. to his withdrawal from the antidepressant Cymbalta.

Source: Stipulation and Consent Order in the Matter of the License of David A. Reynolds, License No. LPC-3385, Case No. COU-2012-4.

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