Introducing The Radar Creation "Radar Sounds" is written by Sean Gadd, and performed by Sean Gadd (guitar, vocals) and Julia McAlee (guitar, vocals). Shot and directed by Clint Hanaway. Sean is a UK-born musician and songwriter who is now based in Los Angeles. He is a founding member and the former bassist of GROUPLOVE.
KPCC / Critics say overhaul of LA jails not enough /
I recently shot the video in this article with documentary filmmaker Samara Rosenbaum in downtown Los Angeles. This Article originally appeared on KPCC Crime & Justice / HERE
As Los Angeles County promises major changes inside its sprawling and troubled jail system, advocates for the mentally ill say leaders are leaving out a key component for successful reform.
Under federally imposed orders approved by a judge this summer, the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department must improve mental health treatment inside the jails. In addition, the department must devise discharge plans for inmates that could include a referral to a social worker or prescription for medications.
But advocates say that's where many former inmates fall off their treatment plan and end up back in crisis, and often, back in jail.
“We ought to be allowing them to exit jail with at least a reasonable chance that they won’t be back any time soon," said UCLA Law Professor Gary Blasi, an attorney with Public Counsel, which is suing to have a say in the court-imposed reforms.
He said inmates need a “warm hand-off” from jailer to social worker because they often lack the capacity to navigate a complicated web of county mental health facilities and services.
“That means that you have a human being in one system who connects with another human being in another system,” Blasi said. “They assume responsibility for seeing that the person doesn’t get dropped in the gap between the bureaucracies.”
Thousands of mentally ill inmates are released from L.A. County jails every year. The population of inmates with serious mental health conditions has continued to grow.
In August, after years of monitoring conditions, the U.S. Department of Justice reached an agreement with the sheriff's department to massively overhaul how such inmates are treated while in jail.
Now, Public Counsel, representing a group of former inmates, is going to court to "intervene" in the case and alter the settlement agreement.
The current agreement “creates practices that will continue to cycle the mentally ill between Skid Row and the County Jails, depriving them of necessary medical and psychiatric services,” according to a Public Counsel statement.
County officials were not immediately available for comment. When they announced reforms last month, county and federal officials called them “historic.”
The provisions in the settlement agreement will “usher in a new era” for treatment of mentally ill inmates in the county’s jail system, said U.S. Attorney Eileen Decker.
Blasi acknowledged the improvements in care for inmates could be significant. But he called the plan for inmates on their way out “ill-conceived” and in violation of the American with Disabilities Act because it fails to provide adequate care to mentally ill people.
Public counsel also argues the reforms fail to cover key mental health disorders like dementia and personality disorders, even though they can be more disabling than schizophrenia, said Blasi.
Many of the mentally ill inmates inside L.A. County jails committed minor crimes and never should have been arrested in the first – or at least should have gone to a hospital instead of jail, said Blasi.
That’s a view shared by District Attorney Jackie Lacey, who released a plan in July to divert more people from jail.
Lacey recommended mental health training for all law enforcement officers in the county, as well as steps for building up a network of treatment options for lower level offenders who don't necessarily belong in jail.
HARLEY DAVIDSON / RECOGNITION /
I'm truly honored to get recognition from Harley Davidson on this last build! Nothing's quite like a Harley, they're fantastic machines. Thanks to all the hundreds of people who have shared these posts and sent their encouragement!
Bike EXIF gives the lowdown on Clint Hanaway's 883 Dirt Tracker build. "Once it was stripped down to the engine and...
Posted by Harley-Davidson on Tuesday, September 8, 2015
.@BikeEXIF gives the lowdown on Clint Hanaway's 883 Dirt Tracker build.
Read more: http://t.co/biYgK8F9QA pic.twitter.com/Z4ftl8HbDf
— Harley-Davidson (@harleydavidson) September 8, 2015