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Civil Commitment Theory

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Civil Commitment Theory Sherrie Brown Dennis Lang LSJ 332/CHID 332 Fall 2006 Legal Justification for Civil Commitment Parens Patriae Traditional role of state as ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civil Commitment Theory


1
Civil Commitment Theory
  • Sherrie Brown
  • Dennis Lang
  • LSJ 332/CHID 332
  • Fall 2006

2
Legal Justification for Civil Commitment
  • Parens Patriae
  • Traditional role of state as sovereign and
    guardian of persons under legal disability.
  • Used as justification for involuntary
    institutionalization of people with mental
    disabilities in mid-19th Century USA.
  • Theory is that state has obligation to protect
    interests of those who cannot do so for
    themselvesrequires finding of incapacity.
  • Typically used to commit people who are
    considered danger to themselves.

3
Continued
  • Police Power
  • Purpose is to protect society from potential
    harme.g., criminal laws and public health codes
  • Justification for commitment of people with
    mental illness who are considered danger to
    others.
  • Unlike criminal defendants, people facing police
    power commitments can be confined without proof
    that they violated criminal law.

4
Constitutional Theories to Challenge
Institutionalization
  • 14th Amendment
  • All persons born or naturalized in the United
    States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof
    are citizens of the United States and of the
    State wherein they reside. No State shall make
    or enforce any law which shall abridge the
    privileges or immunities of citizens of the
    United States nor shall any State deprive any
    person of life, liberty, or property, without due
    process of law nor deny to any person within its
    jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
  • 8th Amendment
  • Excessive bail shall not be required, nor
    excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
    punishments inflicted.

5
OConnor v. Donaldson (U.S. Supreme Court 1975)
  • FACTS
  • Mr. Donaldson civilly committed in 1957 and kept
    in custody for 15 years.
  • His father initiated the commitment because his
    son suffering from delusions.
  • Diagnosis was paranoid schizophrenia and
    commitment for care, maintenance and treatment.
  • No evidence of danger to self or others and
    employed prior to commitment.
  • ISSUE
  • Was Donaldsons continued commitment a violation
    of his constitutional right to liberty?
  • HOLDING
  • Yes.
  • REASONING/RATIONALE
  • Involuntary commitment is deprivation of liberty
    which state cannot accomplish without due process
    of law.
  • Must be justified on basis of legitimate state
    interest and confinement must cease when those
    reasons no longer exist.
  • Basis of confinement violated very fundamentals
    of due process when no treatment was provided.
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