Insane killer escapes on field trip to county fair

RockX

Banned
SPOKANE, Wash. — Authorities have put out a statewide alert for a mentally ill killer who escaped during a hospital field trip to a county fair, leading to fears that he'll become more unstable and potentially dangerous the longer he is on the loose with no medication.

Sgt. Dave Reagan of the Spokane County sheriff's office says Phillip Arnold Paul remained at large Friday and officials believe he's headed to Sunnyside, the town where his parents live. Anyone spotting him should call 911 and not try to confront him.

Paul was committed after he was acquitted by reason of insanity in the 1987 slaying of an elderly woman in Sunnyside. He soaked the woman's body in gasoline to throw off search dogs and buried the remains in her flower garden. He reportedly said voices in his head told him she was a witch.

He was caught trying to escape four years later, only to knock a deputy unconscious in the booking area following his arrest.

The 57-year-old Paul escaped Thursday during a supervised outing to the Spokane County Interstate Fair for patients from Eastern State Hospital. Thirty-one patients from the mental hospital were on the trip with 11 staff members.

Local officials and fairgoers said they were stunned that mental patients, including at least one with a criminal past, would be taken to the fair.

"I think it's wrong, it's totally wrong," said Jennifer Craig, who was visiting the fair with her husband and grandchildren. "You're putting too many kids and old disabled people like me at risk."

Patients must be cleared by a treatment team of six to 12 clinicians according to an extensive checklist before they can go on field trips to stores, parks, ball games, fairs and other sites, said hospital spokesman Jim Stevenson said. They wear street clothing and need not all stay together, but staff members are required to keep each patient within eyesight at all times.

"They have gone to the county fair in past years," said hospital spokesman Jim Stevenson.

Hospital CEO Harold E. Wilson told The Spokesman-Review Paul had been "a fairly model patient."

The escape led state Department of Social and Health Services Secretary Susan Dreyfus to order an indefinite halt to all outings involving criminally committed patients at the state's three mental institutions.

Dreyfus also instructed Eastern State to review the policy on patient outings and a plan to prevent similar problems.

"It's outrageous that security was so inept that a guy who's officially regarded as criminally insane was able to just slip away from the group," state Rep. Matt Shea of Spokane Valley told The Spokesman-Review.

It was the second escape for Paul. In 1991, he walked away from custody during a day trip in Medical Lake and was captured at Fishtrap on the western Spokane County line. He attacked a sheriff's deputy in the jail booking area, knocking him unconscious and separating his shoulder, and was convicted of first-degree escape and second-degree assault.

Paul, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, was acquitted by reason of insanity after the 1987 killing and committed to Eastern State Hospital indefinitely.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hW8dpLYUJaUlUu1VlIAHXXdO8J-wD9APQLN00

WTF....

A criminally insane killer on a field trip to the county fair? Plus they have been let out to go to parks, ball games and the local mall. These people should never see the light of day.
 
SPOKANE, Wash. — Authorities have put out a statewide alert for a mentally ill killer who escaped during a hospital field trip to a county fair, leading to fears that he'll become more unstable and potentially dangerous the longer he is on the loose with no medication.

Sgt. Dave Reagan of the Spokane County sheriff's office says Phillip Arnold Paul remained at large Friday and officials believe he's headed to Sunnyside, the town where his parents live. Anyone spotting him should call 911 and not try to confront him.

Paul was committed after he was acquitted by reason of insanity in the 1987 slaying of an elderly woman in Sunnyside. He soaked the woman's body in gasoline to throw off search dogs and buried the remains in her flower garden. He reportedly said voices in his head told him she was a witch.

He was caught trying to escape four years later, only to knock a deputy unconscious in the booking area following his arrest.

The 57-year-old Paul escaped Thursday during a supervised outing to the Spokane County Interstate Fair for patients from Eastern State Hospital. Thirty-one patients from the mental hospital were on the trip with 11 staff members.

Local officials and fairgoers said they were stunned that mental patients, including at least one with a criminal past, would be taken to the fair.

"I think it's wrong, it's totally wrong," said Jennifer Craig, who was visiting the fair with her husband and grandchildren. "You're putting too many kids and old disabled people like me at risk."

Patients must be cleared by a treatment team of six to 12 clinicians according to an extensive checklist before they can go on field trips to stores, parks, ball games, fairs and other sites, said hospital spokesman Jim Stevenson said. They wear street clothing and need not all stay together, but staff members are required to keep each patient within eyesight at all times.

"They have gone to the county fair in past years," said hospital spokesman Jim Stevenson.

Hospital CEO Harold E. Wilson told The Spokesman-Review Paul had been "a fairly model patient."

The escape led state Department of Social and Health Services Secretary Susan Dreyfus to order an indefinite halt to all outings involving criminally committed patients at the state's three mental institutions.

Dreyfus also instructed Eastern State to review the policy on patient outings and a plan to prevent similar problems.

"It's outrageous that security was so inept that a guy who's officially regarded as criminally insane was able to just slip away from the group," state Rep. Matt Shea of Spokane Valley told The Spokesman-Review.

It was the second escape for Paul. In 1991, he walked away from custody during a day trip in Medical Lake and was captured at Fishtrap on the western Spokane County line. He attacked a sheriff's deputy in the jail booking area, knocking him unconscious and separating his shoulder, and was convicted of first-degree escape and second-degree assault.

Paul, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, was acquitted by reason of insanity after the 1987 killing and committed to Eastern State Hospital indefinitely.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hW8dpLYUJaUlUu1VlIAHXXdO8J-wD9APQLN00

WTF....

A criminally insane killer on a field trip to the county fair? Plus they have been let out to go to parks, ball games and the local mall. These people should never see the light of day.

It was plain stupid.
 
Yeah, mentally ill people should be put in gulags. We should probably just abolish the insanity defense, IMHO.

When I did this sort of work, we did have various field trips for our "residents". But someone with this guy's history would never have been included. He would have been escorted, at least one-on-one or perhaps two to one, to whatever he needed outside the facility, (for a very few this even included university classes), but never would have been allowed out with such relaxed security for a recreational event.
 
When I did this sort of work, we did have various field trips for our "residents". But someone with this guy's history would never have been included. He would have been escorted, at least one-on-one or perhaps two to one, to whatever he needed outside the facility, (for a very few this even included university classes), but never would have been allowed out with such relaxed security for a recreational event.

It does sound as if the security aspect wasn't well thought out. I know there are powerful drugs used to treat schizophrenia. Do you think he could have only pretended to take them, in anticipation of this outing?
 
It does sound as if the security aspect wasn't well thought out. I know there are powerful drugs used to treat schizophrenia. Do you think he could have only pretended to take them, in anticipation of this outing?

It depends on how well they monitored the drugtaking. I always felt badly about doing this but it was necessary: we checked that the pills had actually been swallowed, not "tongued" or stashed between gum and cheek. There is a very high rate of noncompliance with antipsychotic (read: antischizophrenic) drugs. Part is attributable to the side effects, and much has to do with the nature of the disorder itself. You don't see this with antidepressants, for instance. Once the therapeutic effect has begun, very few want to discontinue taking their meds, unless they feel so good they believe they don't need them any more.
 
When I did this sort of work, we did have various field trips for our "residents". But someone with this guy's history would never have been included. He would have been escorted, at least one-on-one or perhaps two to one, to whatever he needed outside the facility, (for a very few this even included university classes), but never would have been allowed out with such relaxed security for a recreational event.

Yeah, but webb annoys me.

They should probably also put some GPS bracelets on them anytime they're let outside of the facility, to make escape virtually impossible.
 
It depends on how well they monitored the drugtaking. I always felt badly about doing this but it was necessary: we checked that the pills had actually been swallowed, not "tongued" or stashed between gum and cheek. There is a very high rate of noncompliance with antipsychotic (read: antischizophrenic) drugs. Part is attributable to the side effects, and much has to do with the nature of the disorder itself. You don't see this with antidepressants, for instance. Once the therapeutic effect has begun, very few want to discontinue taking their meds, unless they feel so good they believe they don't need them any more.

Thanks. I've heard about the side effects of those drugs. Every time a schizophrenic person here makes the news for something he's done, discontinuing meds is mentioned as the reason. Possibly newer generations of antipsychotics will eliminate the problems.
 
Thanks. I've heard about the side effects of those drugs. Every time a schizophrenic person here makes the news for something he's done, discontinuing meds is mentioned as the reason. Possibly newer generations of antipsychotics will eliminate the problems.

Both are true. Actually I've found that when the first words out of a patient's mouth (these were visitors/family members of our inmates) are "I'm schizophrenic!" this serves as a warning that the person intends to indulge in some sort of bizarre or otherwise unacceptable behavior and we've been forewarned to expect, and presumably to excuse, that behavior. I never fell for it.

The newer generations of drugs, including those in the preclinical testing phases, attempt to improve the therapeutic effect and to minimize the worst of the side effects (weight gain, for which our lab has an answer; blood dyscrasias, blunted intellectual capacity and affect, etc.). The latter two have been the focus of more recent work, but so far attempts to preserve those effects have not been narrow enough to exclude aggressive behavior.
 
Yes Thorn. Also watch out for thoe who say "I am a Republican".
It is kind of like someone who says "Hold my beer and watch this".


jk sortof.
 
Well, I certainly hope they caught him before he could get out of state. It would just look that much worse, even if it was just the Idaho Panhandle (which is close to Spokane). :cool:

He would have fit right in if he had made it to the panhandle.
 
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