Monday, July 6, 2009

Groundbreaking New Report from MVFHR/NAMI

For Immediate Release Contact: Susannah Sheffer

July 6, 2009 617-512-2010

sheffer@aceweb.com

Death Penalty and Mental Illness:

Families of Victims Speak out at National Convention;

“Double Tragedies” Report Released


San Francisco, CA—For the first time, families of murder victims have joined with families of persons with mental illness who have been executed to speak out against the death penalty.

Double Tragedies, a report being released today at a special session on the first day of the annual convention of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), calls the death penalty “inappropriate and unwarranted” for people with severe mental disorders and “a distraction from problems within the mental health system that contributed or even directly led to tragic violence.”

The report calls for treatment and prevention, not execution. It is available online at www.nami.org/doubletragedies.

The report, a joint project of NAMI and Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights (MVFHR), is based on extensive interviews with 21 family members from 10 states: California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.

“Family opposition to the death penalty is grounded in personal tragedy,” said MVFHR executive director Renny Cushing. “In the public debate about the death penalty and how to respond in the aftermath of violent crime, these are the voices that need to be heard.”

“Most people with mental illness are not violent,” said NAMI executive director Mike Fitzpatrick. “When violent tragedies occur they are exceptional—because something has gone terribly wrong, usually in the mental health care system. Tragedies are compounded and all our families suffer.”

The report identifies an “intersection” of family concerns and makes four basic recommendations:

· Ban the death penalty for people with severe mental illnesses.

· Reform the mental health care system to focus on treatment and prevention.

· Recognize the needs of families of murder victims through rights to information and participation in criminal or mental health proceedings.

· Families of executed persons also should be recognized as victims and given the assistance due to any victims of traumatic loss.

At least 100 people with mental illness have been put to death in the United States and hundreds more are awaiting execution.


Other resources:

www.mvfhr.org

www.nami.org

www.nami.org/gradeso9

1 comment:

dudleysharp said...

Prevention is always better than punishment.

Obvioulsy, criminal sanctions are for those cases wehere crime was actaully committed.

The death penalty cannot be used in those cases of mental illness which find the murderer not legally culpable for the murder.

That is well known.

In the overwhelming majority of cases mental illness will,not remove legal or moral culpability for the murder.