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The Governor’s Pilot Mental Health Diversion Program: The HELP Program, A Hall County Initiative


Governor Sonny Purdue and the HELP team

New mental health initiatives in the Criminal justice system are quickly emerging in Georgia and the Office of the Mental Health Advocate (OMHA) recently had the opportunity to witness the Honorable Kathlene F. Gosselin of the Hall County Mental Health court administer justice and address the unique needs of its mentally challenged defendants. The Governor' s Pilot Mental Health Diversion program was implemented as a result of concerns by sheriffs from various jurisdictions about providing services for people with mental illness or mental retardation while being detained at the local jails. The collaboration includes representation from the Governor' s Office, Bill Kissell of the Georgia Department of Corrections, the Georgia Department of Human Resources, the State Board of Pardons and Paroles, the local Sheriff, the District Attorney, County Solicitor and the Hall County Superior Court.


Judge Kathlene F. Gosselin
The Governor's pilot program in Gainesville is also referred to as the Health, Empowerment, Linkage and Possibilities (HELP) program and is funded by the Byrne Grant which helps to eliminate cost to local services. The program' s mission is to provide alternatives to incarceration in the Hall County jail by providing community-based treatment services for those defendants with mental health needs. The goal is that this program will be implemented statewide and help to prevent recidivism and deter prolonged involvement with the criminal justice system.

The HELP program accepts referrals made by attorneys, court officials and other agencies. However, the bulk of the referrals come from Hall County detention officials such as Captain Avery Niles, Lt. Danny Woods and Sergeant Wheeler who are many times the first ones to identify the mentally ill inmates. The Hall County Sheriffs Department is invaluable in identifying the mentally challenged inmates and contacting the courts and pretrial officers to divert from the criminal justice system.


L-R Melin Foscue, Erika
Johnson, Devona Stalnaker,
Dr. John Kent (part-time
psychologist - not featured)
Once a referral is received by HELP, a case manager such as Erika Johnson the Program Director conducts an evaluation to determine the person' s eligibility for the program. The criteria for being accepted into the program are based on the mental health needs of the defendant and the severity or nature of the charge(s).

The referral is then forwarded to Judge Gosselin and the District Attorney who reviews the criminal charges and defendant ' s clinical history. If an individual is eligible for the program, then the individual has the option to accept the program and proceed through mental health court or decline and proceed through the normal appropriate criminal court.

At this point, the defendant, case manager and community-service providers create an Individualized Case Plan (ICP) for the defendant to follow. The individual then proceeds through mental health court with periodic status checks. However, if the defendant is non-compliant with any portion or all of the plan, appropriate sanctions such as performing community service, phase reduction, suspension, or expulsion may be imposed.

OMHA had just such an opportunity to witness both these scenarios during our visit in which one person was removed from the program and another person proceeded forward. Judge Gosselin, heard two cases that morning with defendants and family members in attendance. One case involved an eighteen (18) year old mentally ill man, who has been diagnosed with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and was being processed through the Mental Health Court with his mother present for support. The mother stated that she and her son have benefitted from this court because of the personalized support they have received and that people who have mental health challenges such as her son have difficulties grasping the complicated legal system and often times end up " falling between the cracks " . According to the mother, her son, like so many other mentally challenged defendants, are victimized by their limited mental capabilities. This population are sitting targets, both inside the jail, and outside. In addition to her son's case being handled by a Judge that is knowledgeable about mental health issues, she finds that the case workers, probation officers and all of the staff associated with the Mental Health court have worked to ensure that her son will never come back to jail.

"I'm proud of it and I think it's the right thing to do." Bill Kissell, Director of Health Services for the Georgia Department of Corrections

 

For more information about the HELP program, you may contact Erika Johnson, Program Director, at 770-535-6927.

 

 

 

Our Mission
The Office of the Mental Health Advocate (OMHA) was created by statute in 1996 to provide services to attorneys representing criminal defendants with mental health challenges. OMHA monitors cases in Georgia involving pleas of Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) and it directly represents a limited number of insanity acquittees.  We provide services state-wide as a way of assisting attorneys, the hospitals, and the courts in criminal cases involving mentally ill defendants.

Announcements and Articles
Tuesday, July 22, 2008 2:38 PM
Check here frequently for OMHA news and articles about mental health issues in the criminal justice system.

NEW FACES IN THE OFFICE OF THE MENTAL HEALTH ADVOCATE

New intern, Jennifer Lang

OMHA would like to welcome Jennifer Nicole Lane as a 2008 summer intern.  She is a member of the class of 2010 at Nova Southeastern University in Florida.  Her undergraduate major was Psychology and she selected the office as the site of her first internship because of her keen interest in the challenges of mentally ill defendants.  She plans to continue her legal studies at Nova Southeastern and return to Georgia  after attaining her Juris Doctor.

 

Deborah R Baldwin, Attorney

The Office of the Mental Health Advocate welcomes its’ 2008 Spring volunteer, Ms. Deborah Baldwin as she starts an internship.
Ms. Baldwin comes to OMHA with a great deal of experience, as well as a passion for upholding the rights of the mentally ill. She has worked in the legal profession since 1988. Having trained as a legal executive, she qualified as an attorney in England in July 1996 and her background has been primarily in criminal and mental health law. She obtained an LLM in Medical Law from the University of Northumbria in 2005.  

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