Sunday, January 31, 2010

James "J.T." Templeton

James 'J.T.' Templeton
KAYE BENEKE
James 'J.T.' Templeton


Longtime advocate for those with disabilities died Monday.

By Christina Rosales

AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

Updated: 12:31 a.m. Friday, Jan. 29, 2010

Published: 9:56 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 28, 2010

James "J.T." Templeton, born with cerebral palsy and housed for 30 years in a Texas mental institution, wished for an ordinary life. But his advocacy for those with disabilities made his life extraordinary, his friends said.

Templeton died Monday . He was 59.

"Working with him helped develop and open my eyes to the civil rights struggle that people with disabilities are fighting," said Spencer Duran , a project specialist with the Accessible Housing Austin advocacy group.

Templeton moved out of the Austin State School in 1986, following a landmark federal lawsuit filed in 1974 against what was then the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation. In the 1990s, he was part of a group that sued the City of Austin to make parks and facilities more accessible. He joined protesters who took over former Gov. Ann Richards' office in September 1991 to urge lawmakers to spend money for state schools on community-based initiatives for the disabled instead.

His close friend Stephanie Thomas said Templeton spoke to numerous lawmakers, including a U.S. Senate committee, and became a "voice for those with disabilities."

Templeton had numerous health problems, including respiratory infections. His partner of 14 years and fellow activist, Karen Greebon , died in 2005.

"He taught me a lot about how people with speech disabilities are not paid attention to," Thomas said. "Anyone can have opinions about how they want to live. They might not write a doctoral thesis about it, but they can make decisions for themselves."

Thomas said Templeton had a fierce activist spirit but a gentle soul. Duran said Templeton was the voice of reason and experience in pushing for affordable housing on Accessible Housing Austin's board of directors.

"People with disabilities are thought of as a barrier to affordability," Duran said. "They have been excluded in the development process."

Thomas said Templeton shared his story of being dependent on and discouraged by workers at the Austin State School who told him he could not make it in the "real world" so lawmakers could see how their decisions affect real people.

"His advocacy for himself and other people and getting out of the state school was an uphill battle," Thomas said. "He looked toward what he wanted to do and kept working for it."

crosales@statesman.com; 445-3766

Monday, January 25, 2010

Hate Crimes Request

January 23, 2010

Tom Perez

United States Department of Justice

Criminal Investigation Division

P.O. Box 66018

Washington D.C. 20035-6018

Dear Mr. Perez,

On behalf of Community Now! a Texas statewide advocacy group with a mission to support people with disabilities to live in their communities please accept this sincere and critical request to investigate numerous former Texas state employees who committed horrific acts of violence against residents of several state institutions for people with intellectual disabilities. Upon investigation and if warranted, we sincerely request that those individuals found guilty of criminal acts be charged by the DOJ with Hate Crimes against people with disabilities. It was recently reported in the Texas Tribune (note enclosed article) that since 2000, 75 former employees were fired because of confirmed Class 1 Abuse. This level of abuse is the most heinous and includes sexual and physical assault, murder and gross neglect. Of those 75 individuals, only two were incarcerated for their crimes.

It appears that in Texas there is no justice for sadists who commit violent crimes against our most vulnerable and at risk citizens. The Department of Aging and Disability Services (DADS), the agency who operates these facilities points to Adult Protective Services, (APS) the agency that investigates abuse and neglect at these facilities. APS points to local law enforcement and local law enforcement points to the County Prosecutors, and the Prosecutors do little to nothing with these cases. And with everyone pointing fingers at everyone else, people in these facilities are abused without accountability thus sending a clear message to other facility staff that you can get away with murder.

Even with state institution reform legislation passed in the previous Texas Legislative Session (SB 643), it appears that the Ombudsman position with increased oversight authority of these facilities has not been appointed by Governor Perry and even with a network of Ombudsman, there is limited authority by the Texas Attorney General to investigate and prosecute state employees with confirmed Class 1 Abuse if the County Prosecutor is not willing to do so.

As you most likely know, Texas entered into a settlement for numerous civil rights violations investigated by the DOJ CRIPPA division. Currently, the conditions of these facilities are being monitored by the DOJ. Hopefully something will come of this monitoring to ensure the safety of those who live in these facilities. Further, the hope is that the DOJ will ensure Olmstead is honored by closely monitoring the right of residents to leave the facility to live in the community upon their request.

Let me be clear, I am not asking for any further investigation from the DOJ regarding CRIPPA. On behalf of Community Now! we strongly request the immediate investigation and charges of Hate Crimes against those perpetrators of these despicable crimes. I was provided your name by the leadership at the Regional Office of Civil Rights. If you are not the right person to make the decision to investigate these crimes, I implore you to forward this letter to the individual charged with leading Hate Crime investigations at the DOJ with all haste. And if this is not within the authority of the DOJ, please provide me with the contact information of the appropriate person and agency to contact.

I look forward to your prompt response and immediate action to our requests. Thank you for your time and consideration.

Sincerely,

David Wittie, President

CC;

Governor Rick Perry

Lt. Governor David Dewhurst

United States Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison

United States Senator John Cornyn

United States Representative Lloyd Doggett

State Senator Steve Ogden

State Senator Jane Nelson

State Representative Patrick Rose

State Representative Abel Herrera


Thursday, January 21, 2010

Hideously Ironic...

So does anyone have any insight as to how the prosecutors do nothing to people who rape and kill those with disabilities, but this man got 100 years?

Teen with 47 IQ gets 100 years in sex abuse case

Case stems from charges involving the fondling of a 6-year-old neighbor (Link)


updated 6:06 p.m. CT, Wed., June 10, 2009

PARIS, Texas - A teenager who has profound mental disabilities was sentenced to 100 years in prison after pleading guilty to charges in a sex abuse case involving his 6-year-old neighbor.

Aaron Hart, 18, of Paris, was arrested and charged after a neighbor found him fondling her stepson in September. The teen pleaded guilty to five counts, including aggravated sexual assault and indecency by contact, and a jury decided his punishment.

Lamar County Judge Eric Clifford decided to stack the sentences against Hart after jurors settled on two five-year terms and three 30-year terms, The Dallas Morning News reported Wednesday. The judge said neither he nor jurors liked the idea of prison for Hart but they felt there was no other option

"In the state of Texas, there isn't a whole lot you can do with somebody like him," Clifford said.

Diagnosed as mentally disabled
Hart has an IQ of 47 and was diagnosed as mentally disabled as a child. He never learned to read or write and speaks unsteadily.

Despite being a target of bullies, he was courteous, well-behaved and earned money by doing chores for neighbors, supporters said. His parents say he'd never acted out sexually.

"He couldn't understand the seriousness of what he did," said his father, Robert Hart. "I never dreamed they would think about sending him to prison. When they said 100 years — it was terror, pure terror, to me."

Jurors said they sent the judge notes during deliberations in February, asking about alternatives to prison, but didn't get a clear answer. They believed the judge would order concurrent sentences, jurors said.

District Attorney Gary Young said he sympathized with Hart's situation but stands by his decision to prosecute on five counts. Prosecutors commonly pursue several charges for a single incident to see which the jury will support.

Diversion program not an option
Young said a diversion program was not an option since the law doesn't allow that for serious felonies.

"I hope people will remember he committed a violent sexual crime against a little boy," he said.

Hart's appellate attorney, David Pearson, said the court-appointed doctor did the bare minimum to assess competency and ran tests geared for mental illness, not mental retardation.

He said an appeal will be filed.

Abuse of Power: One Family's Fight | The Texas Tribune

Donnell Smith (left) is charged with manslaughter in the suffocation
death of Lubbock State School resident Michael Nicholson (right).


Abuse of Power: One Family's Fight | The Texas Tribune: "Since Michael Nicholson was suffocated and killed by a Lubbock State School worker last June, his brother has played investigator, medical examiner, detective and attorney. He has pleaded for police and prosecutors to take up the case, which they did this fall. But with each day that passes, David Nicholson fears that the man who killed his profoundly disabled brother — and the other employees who stood by and watched it —�will join the ranks of state workers who are never convicted for their acts. “The physically and mentally handicapped are not equally represented under the laws of Texas,” David says. “And nobody seems to want to do anything about it.”

David has reason to worry. Of the 75 employees fired from Texas’ institutions for the disabled for “Class 1” sexual or physical abuse in the last decade, just 13 have been prosecuted, according to a Texas Tribune investigation. And only two ever served jail time."

Paula Mixson, a consultant who spent two decades working for the Texas agency that conducts abuse investigations, says getting local authorities to pursue these cases is a constant battle. “We really struggled to get our cases to their attention, but they were rarely ‘sexy’ enough,” says Mixson, who retired from the Department of Family and Protective Services in 2003. “In the scale of everything else going on, these aren’t seen as major crimes.”

In Lubbock County, District Attorney Matt Powell insists that’s not the case. The Lubbock County District Attorney's Office, which has prosecuted more serious state school abuse cases in the last decade than any other Texas D.A.'s office, is pursuing a manslaughter charge against 38-year-old Donnell Smith, the Lubbock employee who pinned down and asphyxiated Michael on June 6. Powell won't talk specifically about Michael’s case; he's got a policy against discussing cases he's investigating. But he maintains his office is always “aggressive and proactive” about abuse cases — no matter how difficult they are to prosecute. “You see the same challenge in a lot of these cases: a victim who can’t communicate, no witnesses to it,” he says. “You want to focus on the guy who was really the main abuser.”

At the time of his death, Michael, 45, had lived at the Lubbock State School for three decades. He was non-verbal, fragile, and had the mental capacity of an infant, and he was not supposed to be physically restrained under any circumstances. Yet according to the state abuse report, when Michael refused to get dressed on that June day, Smith repeatedly sat and lay atop him to hold him down, mocking him and then choking him with a towel until his face turned blue. When Michael became unresponsive, Smith didn’t immediately call for help; it took 10 minutes for him to start his failed attempt at CPR. When investigators asked Smith how Michael had died, he lied repeatedly, telling them Michael hit his head while jumping on the bed.

Though Smith, 38, was fired for his acts, and a detailed state investigation released shortly after determined he’d committed “Class 1” physical abuse, David said Lubbock police expressed little interest in the case for two months — until he took matters into his own hands. Outraged at what he calls a complete lack of communication between Lubbock police and prosecutors, David delivered the 66-page state investigative report to the medical examiner himself. In August, the medical examiner declared Michael’s death a homicide. But police didn't issue an arrest warrant until October 28, four and a half months after Michael’s death. Smith, who was charged with manslaughter, made bail several days later. Weeks later, when David called the Lubbock District Attorney's Office, he said he learned police had not yet turned over evidence or reports to local prosecutors.

Two phone messages left with the Lubbock police chief were not returned.

David, who has since drawn disability advocates into the fray, says he’s pleased Smith has been charged — but he's still waiting anxiously for a trial date. And he's livid that the five other employees who witnessed Michael’s death, all of whom have been fired for their inaction, haven’t been charged with failing to intervene. In the highly publicized Corpus Christi State School “fight club” ring last year, workers who watched but didn’t participate were still prosecuted for their involvement. None of those disabled residents died or were seriously injured.

Powell, says in some cases, prosecutors have no choice but to let the lesser criminals off the hook so they have someone to testify against the worst offender. Witnesses to a crime could be charged with failing to intervene, for example, or with making false statements. But if they’re charged, they’re more likely to lawyer up and far less likely to speak freely about the perpetrator’s conduct. “If you have a victim who dies or is unable to relay what happened, you have to rely on guys who may be culpable in some way, but can give witness statements against the main actor,” Powell says. “Sometimes you’ve got to make a pact with the devil to get the main actor.”

But Lilly Nicholson, Michael and David’s mother, says that “pact” is unacceptable for her family. “It just makes me so angry and sick in my stomach,” she says. “We want these people to be prosecuted. If this happened to anyone else, it would be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”

Wednesday, January 20, 2010



Abuse of Power

Link to Texas Tribune

State employees fired for abusing Texas’ most profoundly disabled citizens are rarely prosecuted for their acts — even when they’re heinous.

A Texas Tribune review of a decade’s worth of abuse and neglect firings at state institutions for people with disabilities found that just 16 percent of the most violent or negligent employees were ever charged with crimes. Of those, the overwhelming majority had their charges reduced or dismissed; just three percent served jail time. Among the abusive employees who were never charged? An employee who punched and kicked a mentally disabled man, fracturing his ribs and lacerating his liver. An employee who sexually assaulted an immobile resident while he was giving him a bath. And a worker who used his belt to repeatedly whip a disabled resident across the face and mouth.

Elected officials, who have been under pressure from the U.S. Justice Department to improve conditions at Texas’ 13 state-supported living centers, say the lack of prosecutions is troubling — but that they can't force local district attorneys to do it.

Meanwhile, local authorities say institutional abuse cases are particularly tough to prove. The victims often can’t verbalize what happened to them. The eyewitnesses are unreliable. And just because an act of abuse is a fireable offense doesn’t mean it rises to the level of criminal conduct or even gets reported to prosecutors.

Advocacy groups say the investigation suggests a breakdown between state abuse investigators and local authorities. It also confirms their worst fear: that there’s no equal justice for people with disabilities. Unless an abuse case receives widespread media attention, like last year’s “fight club” at the Corpus Christi State School, it rarely warrants criminal charges. “If you’re the most vulnerable citizen in Texas and you’re beaten mercilessly, your perpetrator is not held accountable,” said Jeff Garrison-Tate, whose non-profit Community Now! advocates for the nearly 4,600 disabled Texans living in state institutions. “This is what perpetuates a culture of abuse in this state.”

Roughly 300 state school employees are fired or suspended every year for abusing or neglecting residents in Texas’ state-supported living centers. Since 2000, about 75 employees have been fired for “Class 1 Abuse” — the most serious physical or sexual abuse. An extensive Texas Tribune search of county and state arrest records, indictments and other court filings revealed just 13 of these fired employees were ever charged with crimes for their acts. Of those, two served jail time. Three had their cases dismissed. And seven received lesser charges or deferred adjudication in a plea deal. One case is still pending.

One employee who was fired for inserting a hairbrush in a resident's anus and fondling another resident's breasts was never charged with a crime. Neither was a worker who beat a resident in the face because she wouldn't be quiet. The woman had to be rushed to the emergency room for stitches. In another un-prosecuted case, a staffer slammed a resident face first into a door; the man sustained a head wound that required staples to close.

The Blame Game

Ask state agencies, local police and district attorneys why there are so few prosecutions and the finger pointing begins.

The Department of Aging and Disability Services oversees the state institutions and is responsible for firing abusive employees. But it doesn’t conduct abuse and neglect investigations — the Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) does it for them. Officials with DFPS say whenever they get an allegation of serious physical injury, sexual abuse or death, they contact local law enforcement within the hour. If their investigation concludes a crime may have been committed, they’re required to forward their investigative report to local authorities. But DFPS doesn’t track what happens next. And police departments say they don’t always get the reports from the state. In some cases they have opened their own investigations ahead of DFPS.

District attorneys who responded to the Texas Tribune’s interview request say they don’t always get the message — either from the state investigators or from police detectives. There’s a precedent here: During the Texas Youth Commission’s sweeping abuse scandal three years ago, thousands of un-prosecuted abuse complaints were found sitting in file folders in local police departments.

"We really like to prosecute the bad guys, the employees who pick on people in state institutions. There's no problem there," said Rob Kepple, executive director of the Texas District and County Attorneys Association. If the prosecutors aren't pursuing cases, "I would surmise we're either not getting them, or they don't rise to the level of a criminal offense."

Even when prosecutors do get the case files, they’re not always able to proceed. In some cases, they say, the act the employee was fired for doesn’t qualify as criminal conduct. In other cases, authorities don’t have the evidence or witnesses to prosecute. And occasionally, when a guilty verdict isn’t a sure bet, they don’t have the resources to make the effort. “Trying to determine who’s the guilty party, and being able to prove they were the ones who inflicted the injuries — that’s especially difficult when you have a victim who is incapacitated,” said Lubbock County District Attorney Matt Powell, whose office has prosecuted more of these Class 1 offenders than any other Texas D.A.'s office. Added Taylor County District Attorney James Eidson:"By their nature, these are pretty much circumstantial cases, which is what makes them so difficult."

And despite the fact that these abusive acts are committed by state employees, inside state-operated institutions, and against people who are sometimes wards of the state, Texas' own attorney general doesn't have the authority to step in. Following the 2007 TYC sexual abuse scandal, and revelations that a West Texas district attorney had failed to prosecute an abusive youth prison administrator, the attorney general's office asked lawmakers for more authority to step in. Lawmakers responded by allowing state prosecutors to offer assistance to local prosecutors. But the attorney general's office still can't intervene to force a prosecution.

"The Legislature has not given the Office of the Attorney General authority to prosecute these cases," said Jerry Strickland, a spokesman for Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott. "Only district attorneys have that authority."

But advocates for the disabled say all of these explanations shroud the real reason abusive employees aren’t prosecuted: because their victims can’t demand it. Many are non-verbal or intellectually impaired. Most either don’t have families to advocate for them, or have out-of-town relatives poorly positioned to keep the pressure on local authorities. In short, advocates say, prosecutors know if they don’t make the effort, no one will hold them accountable.

“If someone saw me on the street kicking my dog, I would be in jail,” Garrison-Tate said. “But when a person with a significant disability in our state-operated, taxpayer-funded institutions is beaten, nothing happens to them.”

TOMORROW: Relatives of a disabled man choked and killed in a state school share their struggle for justice.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Secret film uncovers 'disabled hate crime' in Wales

(link)

Footage of attacks on disabled people and their property was recorded for the programme

Some disabled people in Wales are suffering abuse and threats for no other reason than their disability, an investigation by BBC Wales has found.

Secretly recorded footage for the documentary Why Do You Hate Me? shows a wheelchair user being mocked and threatened in a bar.

In another incident a mother and daughter film an attacker smashing every window on their mobility car.

In Wales in 2009, police recorded 116 such incidents, with 18 convictions.

The programme, to be shown on BBC One Wales on Monday evening, reveals how many such incidents go unrecorded.

I think we haven't collectively picked them up and investigated and prosecuted them in the way we should
Kier Starmer QC, director of public prosecutions

The Director of Public Prosecutions, Kier Starmer QC, admitted that the justice system did not always get it right when dealing with so-called disability hate crime.

He said: "I think there are lots and lots of incidents of disability hate crime.

"I think we haven't collectively picked them up and investigated and prosecuted them in the way we should."

CCTV footage of vandal attack
A CCTV camera catches a vandal attacking Irene Miles' vehicle

The programme is presented by Simon Green, a wheelchair user from Bridgend, who secretly filmed a couple of his nights out to expose the hostility and abuse he sometimes experiences.

During one evening he was confronted by a group of men who verbally abuse him, swearing at him and calling him a "cripple", and suggesting he could really walk.

Mr Green, who has been a wheelchair user for six years, says during that time he has been physically, as well as verbally, assaulted because he is disabled.

'Nuisance to them'

And though the law has got tough on people who abuse others on the grounds of their race or religion, the attitude towards often low-level but continued abuse of disabled people seems far behind, the programme found.

Mr Green also met Irene Miles, 77, who was born disabled. She and her daughter Lorraine, who is her full-time carer, say they have suffered years of abuse at their Newport home.

Simon Green
Simon Green went under cover to film for the programme

The most recent attack was captured by a CCTV camera and shows a hooded man running around their vehicle, smashing every window before disappearing down the road. The vehicle is a lifeline for the family.

They said they have contacted police 60 times in the last five years, but only this latest incident, which happened last November, has been categorised as a hate crime.

Lorraine said: "I feel as though the police think we're a nuisance to them. I think now they're sitting up and taking note but the help for me and my mum has come far too late."

The family believe their case has similarities with the horrific story of Fiona Pilkington.

She killed herself and her disabled daughter, 18, in Leicestershire in 2007 after years of persistent abuse.

Gwent Police are now reviewing the handling of Lorraine and Irene's case.

Chief Supt Paul Symes says, "I will do my upmost to ensure that this is not a Pilkington case for Gwent Police. I'm aware of what the learning was within Pilkington, part of that involved some criticism around some perception that agencies weren't working together."

Campaigners say disability hate crimes are too often unreported by victims and under recorded by police but that this needs to change.

Why Do You Hate Me? is shown on Monday, 4 January on BBC One Wales at 2030 GMT.