Wednesday, March 5th, 2008
Mental health crisis plagues New Orleans’ 12,000 homeless
Soon after 9/11 Republican scaremongers kept arguing for “tougher” terrorism laws because otherwise the US could actually “loose a major city.”
I imagine it would look something like this:
| Permalink | Mail entry to a friendHe was diagnosed by a psychiatrist as aggressive, homeless and schizophrenic. He was kicked out of a Salvation Army homeless shelter late last year for holding a fork to a fellow resident’s throat. On Jan. 4, Johnson was committed to a psychiatric facility for causing a disturbance at a bank. He was released and, a few weeks later, attacked New Orleans police Officer Nicola Cotton, 24, in a parking lot.
Johnson wrestled Cotton’s service handgun from her and shot her 15 times, killing the officer, police said. Johnson remains in jail without bond, charged with first-degree murder.
New Orleans health and law enforcement officials say more cases such as this could unfold if the city’s mental health crisis isn’t resolved soon. Since Hurricane Katrina ravaged the city 2½ years ago, the number of public mental health facilities and community outreach centers has decreased dramatically, leaving the mentally ill without medication and monitoring. (…)
Mental illness also is rampant among the city’s homeless, whose population has spiked since the storm from 6,200 to 12,000 today, says Sam Scaffidi of the New Orleans Police Homeless Assistance Unit. Under the Interstate 10 overpass at the corner of Claiborne Avenue and Canal Street downtown, homeless encampments have multiplied since Katrina into a sprawling colony of tents, soiled sleeping bags and cardboard caves.
USA Today



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