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Brothers and Sisters:

 

Please do not let this very serious criminal act by those who took the

Oath to Protect and Serve, go over your heads.

 

Brothers and Sisters Always--God and Country . . .

 

 

Dan J. Jovanovic

 

 

Woman Forcibly Injected With Drugs

 

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Political Prisoner Or

Criminally Insane?

Woman Forcibly Injected With Drugs After Protesting DMV Regulations

 

(The Empire Journal) Albany, New York residents beware. What happened to

Bliss Alexandra could happen to you.

 

Anger police chief James Turley and you might end up at a state hospital

for the violent and criminally insane, hundreds of miles away from your

family and friends, forcibly injected with mind altering drugs.

 

Bliss Alexandra who is also known as Darlene Early - or Darlene Barely

as the Albany Police Department call her, was returned to Albany on

Wednesday, Dec. 8 after completing an involuntary stay at Kirby Forensic

Psychiatric Center in Manhattan, NY ordered by Albany City Court judge

Thomas Keefe after she exercised what she thought were her

constitutional rights.

 

She is scheduled to appear in Albany City Court before Keefe Thursday,

Dec. 9.

 

After Alexandra called the Albany Department of Public Safety to

complain about her personal property being towed by police from a

private driveway, Chief Turley responded by telling her he was either

going to arrest her or have her removed to the Capital District

Psychiatric Center.

 

Alexandra was snatched from the doorstep of her Second Avenue residence

by two plainclothes police officers on Aug. 26, a day after she had

filed a complaint with the Albany County district attorney’s office

against Police Chief Turley.

 

And that he did.

 

Not only did he cause her arrest on three felony charges but caused her

to be involuntarily committed with serial killers and rapists and

subjected to the forced injection of antipsychotic drugs.

 

Her alleged crime—exercising free speech on private property.

 

The legal scholar and constitutionalist, with no apparent mental illness

history, was originally committed to Kirby in September for a 90-day

evaluation by Judge Keefe because he claimed two examiners from the

Albany County Correctional Facility had determined she had no

comprehension of the charges against her or of court procedure because

she refused to discuss the case with them.

 

“I predict, merely from knowing the side effects of these drugs and as

listed in the Physician’s Desk Reference, that they are actually trying

to kill this woman. "

 

Kirby, operated by the state Office of Mental Health as is CDPC, is a

maximum security, 168 bed hospital on Ward’s Island. Opened in 1995, it

provides secure treatment and evaluation for the forensic patients of

courts of New York City and Long Island.

 

But Alexandra isn’t in the court system of New York City nor was she

violent nor were her alleged crimes of a violent nature.

 

She a resident of Albany County which is served by the Mid-Hudson

Psychiatric Center in Poughkeepsie.

 

And then there’s CDPC in their own back yard at 75 New Scotland Ave.

 

So why was she removed to Kirby?

 

Albany Police have charged Alexandra with three felony counts of second

degree possession of a forged instrument but not only do the arrest

reports and felony complaints allegedly contain false statements and

information, but there appear to have been egregious violations of her

constitutional rights as well as statutory law in her involuntary

commitment and medication including an alleged falsified court order and

denial of her right to counsel.

 

Nagging questions exist about why and how she was removed from the

Capital District area, her family, friends and legal counsel and sent to

Kirby and the ensuing alleged rights violations.

 

Perhaps her knowledge of the Constitution and the court system is

exactly why she was arrested in the first place - and her challenge of

state’s Department of Motor Vehicles and what she claims is the state’s

unconstitutional regulation of the right to travel.

 

Read To Publish Findings

 

Alexandra has undertaken five years of research into the issue and was

ready to publish her findings. In an interview with The Empire Journal

while inside Kirby, Alexandra said that since 1995 she has been

communicating with the Department of Motor Vehicles and former Albany

police chief Robert Wolfgang on the ability of people to travel in their

automobile in alternative ways without paying fees to DMV.

 

She says she encountered no problem with Wolfgang who had communicated

with her amicably but that when Turley became chief, the congeniality of

the police agency ceased.

 

Sharon CarpinelloAlthough the state Office of Mental Health claims that

treatment in their facilities is carried out with respect for each

patient’s privacy and rights, Alexandra says her rights were violated

from the getgo and a review of the records, obtained with her consent,

appear to support her claims and give cause for an immediate independent

review of policy chief James Turley, the Albany Department of Public

Safety and the state Office of Mental Health of which Sharon Carpinello

is the commissioner.

 

Carpinello’s husband, Anthony Carpinello, is a state Supreme Court

justice in the Appellate Division, Third Department.

 

As part of her protest against of what she claims is the state’s

unconstitutional regulation of travel, Alexandra allegedly displayed two

cardboard license plates on a parked car in addition to a mock

registration sticker and inspection sticker. Police claim they are

forged instruments that were in her “possession” but according to the

arrest reports and complaints filed by Albany police, there is no

allegation of or proof that Alexandra operated the vehicle on the public

highway or that the vehicle was even in her “possession,” being parked

on property across the street from her residence.

 

Since her forced incarceration and hospitalization, Alexandra has now

been evicted from her residence, although it is unclear if any eviction

proceedings were legally conducted.

 

Political prisoner and dissident or criminally insane?

 

Darlene Early, or Bliss Alexandra as she is professionally known, is an

author, mediator and paralegal. She is the owner and operator of The

People’s Alternative in Albany, an agency founded in 1990 offering

paralegal services. In 1993, she co-authored a self-help legal book with

attorney Robin Leonard, published by the nationally known self-help

organization, Nolo Press.

 

She has passed her “fitness” test after been forcibly injected with

drugs for nearly 60 days, a combination of drugs that physicians

contacted by The Empire Journal have labeled as a “lethal combination”

and a “toxic cocktail actually equivalent to attempted murder”.

 

With the 90-day commitment order expiring Thursday, Dec. 9, and found to

be competent, the state was required to return her to Albany County.

 

Alexandra was snatched from the doorstep of her Second Avenue residence

by two plainclothes police officers on Aug. 26, a day after she had

filed a complaint with the Albany County district attorney’s office

against Police Chief Turley for what she said constituted threats and an

intimidating manner with threat of unwarranted arrest.

 

The district attorney’s office has refused to respond to requests for

information by The Empire Journal regarding the matter

 

Those alleged threats by Turley, captured on audiotape by Alexandra,

occurred after Albany police had towed the parked vehicle from the

private driveway and impounded it but had allegedly not served any

papers on Alexandra indicating the cause for the towing.

 

On Aug. 20, according to Alexandra, two individuals in plain clothes,

traveling in an unmarked car, had arrived at her Second Avenue apartment

at approximately 7 p.m.. She said they pounded on the door, threatening

to break it down if she didn’t open it.

 

“Police!” she said they yelled, “we know you’re in there, come out or we

will break down the door!”.

 

Alexandra, 60, a small woman, claims the two officers, later identified

to be patrol officers Jeffrey DeMarco and W.F. Warner, did not offer any

explanation for their actions and did not show any warrant. She said she

was startled and scared and therefore refused to open the door to them.

 

Horrific Nightmare

 

And that was only the beginning of what was to become a horrific

nightmare for Alexandra.

 

Across the street from Alexandra’s residence in a private driveway was

parked a 1991 Toyota sedan. She says the vehicle was parked there with

permission of the owners.

 

The ensuing arrest reports written by Patrol Officers Jeffrey DeMarco

and W.F. Warner claim the vehicle was parked on the street at 365 2nd

Ave. but Alexandra and witnesses dispute that, saying it was parked in

the private driveway at 369 2nd Ave. Because the vehicle was parked on

private property with permission of the property owner, police had no

legal right to tow the vehicle and cause it to be impounded, Alexandra

says. Even if the property owner had complained, police still could not

legally tow the vehicle from private property, only the property owner

could legally have it towed.

 

And then there’s the version of Albany Department of Public Safety

spokesman Det. James

 

Miller who claims it was parked at the curb on Central Avenue. Miller

concedes that police would have no legal authority to tow a vehicle from

private property unless it had been “dumped” there as the result of a

police chase.

 

Miller responded to The Empire Journal’s request to Chief Turley about

the matter, saying that he would answer questions about the incident and

not to contact Chief Turley again.

 

Miller concedes there was no police chase of Alexandra and that police

officers did not see Alexandra operating the vehicle on the highway or

in possession of the vehicle nor did any citizen sign a complaint

regarding her display of the cardboard and paper stickers. No traffic

tickets were issued.

 

Witnesses to the arrest of Alexandra state that at no time during they

observe Alexandra make any statements to the police.

 

Miller maintains the vehicle was towed because it was parked at the curb

on Central Avenue but when The Journal told Miller there were witnesses

who said the vehicle was on private property, Miller said he would have

to check the tow log and to call back.

 

However, Miller refused to answer subsequent calls by The Journal about

the matter, saying that he was busy.

 

According to the arrest reports, DeMarco was the arresting officer with

Warner assisting in the arrest of Alexandra at 7:03 p.m. on Aug. 26 at

394 2nd Ave. The report states that no warrants were executed, no

Miranda rights were given and that the defendant’s condition was normal.

 

However, the police seem to have a problem with who the defendant is.

According to the documents, the mental health examiners found that

Alexandra did not “understand” the charges against her because she

repeatedly told them her name was and is not “Darlene Barely”..

 

The arrest report, the felony complaints and even the court orders

committing Alexandra all contain the name Darlene Barely.

 

And, because she told the police the reports contained false

information, that her name was not Darlene Barely and she repeatedly

told them her rights were being violated, she was deemed uncooperative

and “unable to understand the charges against her”

 

Although the police reports admit that she was not given her Miranda

warnings prior to questioning and defendants are constitutionally

guaranteed the right to remain silent and that anything they say can and

will be used against them in a court of law, Alexandra was rendered

“mentally incompetent” because she refused to answer their questions.

 

In the Supreme Court landmark case of Miranda v. Arizona, the U.S.

Supreme Court established proper police procedure in the conduct of

interrogations, the character of voluntary or involuntary confessions

and their admissibility in state trials.

 

Miranda clearly established that regardless of the circumstances under

which it occurs, regardless of who the examiners are and regardless of

who the suspects are, custodial interrogation is inherently

coercive---psychologically if in no other way. Custodial interrogation

makes any statements obtained from suspects during this period

“compelled” and thus not “voluntary” beyond a reasonable doubt.

 

Although Albany police are now claiming that the vehicle they allege

belongs to Alexandra was parked on the street, Officer Warner’s incident

report signed Aug. 20 under the warning that “false statements are

punishable as a crime” indicates that the incident occurred at the “side

365 2nd Av., Albany”, not on the street as later claimed.

 

According to Alexandra and others, there is no driveway at 365 2nd Avenue.

 

Warner’s report says the vehicle was last registered to a male who

“apparently sold vehicle to (the defendant) sometime this past April.

Attempts to contact (the alleged seller) thus far have been

unsuccessful” indicating that the police had no proof in hand at the

time of arrest that the defendant had “possession” of the car. The

report says the “vehicle was towed and hold was put on it per Sgt. Basil”.

 

CREDIBILITY OF POLICE REPORTS AN ISSUE

 

But according to the arrest report filed on the date of arrest on Aug.

26 by DeMarco, not only was the defendant’s name wrong but so was the

date of birth. The arrest was listed as a “crime in progress” at 365 2nd

Ave. although the vehicle had been towed six days earlier and on the

property report, the location of the incident is listed as a different

address raising questions as to the credibility, legal sufficiency and

veracity of the police reports.

 

That’s only the tip of iceberg.

 

On Aug. 20, after the initial confrontation by the police, Alexandra

called Turley to report that she had felt threatened by his officers and

that they had taken personal property unlawfully and she wanted it returned.

 

She was then contacted by Officer Kurt Ricky and informed that she had

to appear at the city police station to sign a release for the car. She

refused saying that they took it wrongfully, they should return it and

that she wasn’t signing any release.

 

After Ricky contacted her, she called Turley on Aug. 24, two days before

her arrest, to register a complaint about Ricky’s demand.

 

She audiotaped the call.

 

Turley told her to stop calling the police department or he would send

“someone over to arrest you and we’re going to bring Mobile Crisis. You

can’t do what you’re doing with your car, it’s illegal”.

 

“I’m not doing anything with the car. It’s sitting in a private area”.

She told him he had no authority to take the car and with that, Turley’s

response was “if you call again, I’m sending an officer with Mobile

Crisis and either take you to CDPC or to jail”.

 

Mobile Crisis is a “team” from the Capital District Psychiatric Center.

According to their website, the “team” is a mobile response to

individuals experiencing a psychiatric emergency throughout Albany

County. It provides access to persons in mental or emotional distress

and to agencies and to individuals who are dealing with individuals in

such distress.

 

It appears perhaps Chief Turley is the one who was in distress. He

claims that she had called the department six or seven times about the

car being towed.

 

Alexandra didn’t call the police department again. Instead she filed a

formal complaint with the Albany County District Attorney’s office

against Turley the next day.

 

A day later, on Aug. 26, she was arrested.

 

But she wasn’t taken to CDPC, instead she was immediately incarcerated,

arraigned on Aug. 27 on felony charges without legal counsel being present.

 

On Aug. 30, as allowed by law, a friend attempted to file a writ of

habeas corpus at the Albany City court clerk’s office and was not

allowed to do so. Although state law requires that a preliminary hearing

be held within 72 hours for a person incarcerated without bail to

determine the sufficiency of the charges, no hearing was held.

 

According to Carl R. Frederick, president of the American Pro Se

Association of Plainfield, NJ, a friend of Alexandra’s attempted to

retain legal counsel for her. Frederick, also a friend and business

associate of Alexandra’s, says that between Sept. 2 and 5, Albany

attorney Michael Feit engaged in several conversations with Albany

police and district attorney’s office on Alexandra’s behalf concerning

“obvious overcharging” and requests that the charges be dismissed or at

least reduced to a misdemeanor so bail can be set, defendant released

and a trial date set.

 

Frederick says that Feit told him that it was “very apparent to him

there was personal animosity against the defendant by officials and he

got none of the cooperation he normally gets and certainly expected

under the circumstances”.

 

Not Provided Copies Of Charges

 

Although state Criminal Procedure Law requires that defendants be

informed of the charges against them, as of Sept. 9, Alexandra says she

had not been provided with copies of the charges against her including

any alleged witness statements or informed of the probable cause that

police were using to cause her arrest.

 

Each of the three complaints filed against “Darlene Barely” under

penalty of perjury by Patrol Officer DeMarco state that at the time of

arrest, she had in her possession the alleged forged instruments and

that the sources of his information are oral statements made to him by

Alexandra and/or from information obtained from witnesses whose

depositions were attached to the complaints.

 

Alexandra resided at 394 2nd Ave where she was arrested but the vehicle

was parked in the driveway at 369 2nd Ave., property neither owned or

leased by Alexandra.

 

There were no witness depositions attached to the complaints and the

police have readily admitted as have court examiners that Alexandra

refused to speak with them making it improbable that police can now

claim that Alexandra made any incriminating statements.

 

On Aug. 31, Albany city court Judge Keefe signed an order for the

“examination” of Darlene Barely.

 

Robin Siegal, director of the Albany County Department of Mental Health

thereafter assigned Michelle Gerber, a psychologist employed by the

Albany County Correctional Facility, and David J. Kelley, coordinator of

the mental health unit at the facility to examine Alexandra. Neither one

is a licensed physician and neither one was familiar with Alexandra.

Although no past history of mental treatment or any allegation of

violent behavior was presented, Gerber and Kelley filed reports with the

court determining Alexandra was “incapacitated”, thereby causing her

involuntary hospitalization at Kirby, a maximum security facility for

the criminally insane and violent.

 

Despite CDPC being in their backyard, there is no indication that

Alexandra was transported there for an examination by licensed physicians.

 

According to reports filed with the court by Gerber, a licensed

psychologist since only May, 2004, and Kelley, “Barely” said to be an

aka for Darlene Early but with an incorrect birth date for Alexandra,

was “interviewed on Sept. 3 and was “not cooperative”. She told the

interviewers that her arrest and incarceration were “invalid” because

her name was not Barely. She demanded a written statement from the

examiner with the date, time, location and purpose of the examination

along with the signatures, titles and employer of the examiner.

 

According to Gerber’s report, Gerber seemed to find that an unreasonable

request by Alexandra.

 

After receiving the documents, Gerber reports that “Ms Barely stated”

that ‘you two have a problem. I’m not the person written here (pointing

to the document with ‘Darlene Barely’ written on it). Therefore, I have

nothing to say about her and we’re done”.

 

Gerber told the court that in her initial contact with the jail mental

health unit on Aug. 27, she had insisted that her name was “Darlene

Early” and she therefore was in jail ‘under protest’ and for no reason.

As is her constitutional right, Alexandra refused to discuss her

personal history with Gerber and Kelley, and refused to discuss the

charges and was not willing to discuss the legal situation or process

with them.

 

Claiming that she was paranoid, because Alexandra chose to exercise her

Miranda rights, Gerber and Kelley, neither of whom are physicians or

board certified, told the court that the professional paralegal was not

able to acknowledge the charges or her legal situation and was not

“expected to be able to work productively with an attorney to assist in

her own defense”. They claimed that the legal scholar lacked the ability

to comprehend the legal system and courtroom procedures and was an

incapacitated person.

 

Kelley’s observation was that “Ms. Barely” was alert but not cooperative

with the evaluation”. He said her mood was “angry and defiant.”

 

" We are operating in the same environment as occurred in Nazi Germany

and China. Dissents are given psych diagnoses as a way to lock them

up... The judge is practicing medicine without a license by deciding

that she [Alexandra] should be involuntarily committed and drugged "

 

Audiotape Proves Turley Threat

 

At that time, Alexandra had been incarcerated for more than a week and

had allegedly still not been provided copies of the charges against her

and related paperwork despite her requests. Kelley said that her

statement that Albany police chief Turley had told her he was going to

‘throw me in a mental institution’ constituted significant paranoia.

However, as the audiotape of the conversation between Turley and Early

clearly demonstrates, Alexandra was absolutely correct in her statement.

Both psychologists were distressed and disturbed that Alexandra refused

to discuss the charges against her with them.

 

Was Alexandra paranoid in thinking that Turley was trying to have her

committed to a mental institution when she has him captured on audiotape

making that exact statement?

 

But Alexandra’s problems had still only just begun. Within a matter of

days, in violation of Mental Hygiene Law, Criminal Procedure Law,

Corrections Law and yes, the U.S. and New York State Constitutions, it

was ordered that she be forcibly administered a myriad of antipsychotic

drugs in an attempt to “rehabilitate” her so that she could be returned

to Albany to face her criminal charges. The 15 drugs, some in dosages up

to 4000 mg daily, are known to cause cancer, liver damage and other

serious side effects.

 

A physician contacted by The Empire Journal, who spoke on condition of

anonymity, said that “for any individual, especially one who has never

been exposed to any these drugs to be given a toxic cocktail such as

this is actually equivalent to attempted murder, in my opinion.”

 

‘We are operating in the same environment as occurred in Nazi Germany

and China. Dissents are given psych diagnoses as a way to lock them up,”

the physician said. “However, I predict, merely from knowing the side

effects of these drugs and as listed in the Physician’s Desk Reference,

that they are actually trying to kill this woman. The judge is also

practicing medicine without a license by deciding that she should be

involuntarily committed and drugged”..

 

On the basis of Gerber’s and Kelley’s reports, Albany city court judge

Thomas Keefe signed a 90-day temporary order of observation on Sept. 9,

ordering that “Darlene Barely” be committed to the custody of the state

commissioner of the Office of Mental Health for care and treatment in an

“appropriate” facility of the OMH as designated by Carpinello.

 

However, according to attorney Michael Feit, Judge’s Keefe’s order is an

alleged false document.

 

Perhaps intentionally false in order to claim the court and city

complied with state law and Alexandra’s constitutional rights when they

did not.

 

Keefe’s order in which he says that it appears to his satisfaction that

“Darlene Barely” lacks the capacity to understand the proceedings

against “him” or to assist in “his” own defense as a result of mental

disease, claims that she was represented by counsel and that counsel was

given copies of the examination reports of Gerber and Kelley and that no

motion for the requisite hearing had been made.

 

However, Feit says although he consulted with Alexandra but hadn’t been

officially retained, Keefe signed the order before Feit had even

received the Gerber/Kelley reports and before he could request any

hearing. Feit has advised Frederick that Keefe has acknowledged on the

record in open court that he signed the temporary order without hearing

and before counsel had received the reports which constitutes a

violation of the law and safeguards afforded Alexandra.

 

The attorney says that despite the judge’s acknowledgement that the

order was issued unlawfully, the assistant district attorney, on the

record, refused to dismiss or reduce the charges against Alexandra.. A

transcript of the court proceeding is said to exist.

 

The courts have consistently held that “the accused is guaranteed that

he not stand alone against the state at any stage of the prosecution,

formal or informal”, in court or out, where counsel’s absence might

derogate from the accused’s right to a fair trial”.

 

The Court of Appeals has held that it is firmly established that the due

process rights of a mentally ill patient must be fully honored prior to

administration of medication over their objection”.

 

No Previous Record

 

Alexandra was transported to Kirby on Sept. 11 although she had no

previous arrest record, allegations of violent behavior or mental illness.

 

Under the direction of Richard Miraglia, director of forensic services,

the Bureau of Forensic Services in the state Office of Mental Health

(OMH) coordinates the placement of persons and oversees the delivery of

inpatient services to individuals committed to the custody of OMH

commissioner Carpinello pursuant to various sections of Criminal

Procedure Law and Correction Law.

 

The Bureau of Forensic Services is responsible for coordinating the

delivery of mental health services to individuals involved with the

state’s criminal justice system.

 

OMH forensic facilities, with a total bed capacity of 695, include the

Mid-Hudson Forensic Psychiatric Center in Poughkeepsie, bed capacity

264; Central New York Psychiatric Center at Marcy, bed capacity, 206.

and Kirby with 168.

 

Mid-Hudson is designed to serve the upstate counties including Albany.

 

Kirby houses a group of men who have committed some of the most

notorious and gruesome crimes in New York City’s history including

Daniel Rakowitz, former East Village man, who admitted to chopping up

his ex-lover, boiled her remains in a soup and serving the soup to the

homeless. He has been in Kirby since 1991 after being acquitted by

murder by reason of insanity.

 

On Sept. 30, James Hicks, acting director of clinical services at Kirby,

allegedly acting contrary to the provisions of the state’s

administrative law addressing the Office of Mental Heath and rights of

patients, filed an order to show cause with the New York Supreme Court,

why Alexandra should not be forcibly administered medications against

her will. He based his request on affidavits of Paul Sanon, MD, and Ana

Rodriguez, MD.

 

Rodriguez is not a licensed physician but rather a resident, according

to the state Department of Health. Although Mental Hygiene Law states

that a patient must be examined by two board certified physicians before

an order to forcibly administer drugs can be issued, neither Sanon nor

Rodriguez are board certified according to the New York State Department

of Health and professional licensing/disciplinary division of the state

Education Department.

 

In addition, Rodriguez stated in her written report that Alexandra had

been interviewed in the presence of an attorney from the Mental Hygiene

Legal Services. This was later disputed on the record at a court

proceeding by Mary Beth Feerick, a MHLS attorney indicating that

Rodriguez’s report contained alleged false statements..

 

Rodriguez’s report claims that Alexandra lacked the capacity to refuse

medication because she said she had no mental illness and that her

rights were being violated. Rodriguez further claimed that Alexandra had

disorganized and paranoid thinking because she told Rodriguez that she

had “the constitutional Miranda rights and the right to remain silent”.

 

Rodriguez’s report is signed by Cristina Musat, acting clinical director

at Kirby, a certified psychiatrist with the American Board of Neurology

and Psychiatry. However, there is no indication in Rodriguez’s report

that Musat was present during Rodriguez’s examination of Alexandra.

 

The state Department of Health says that Musat has only a limited

license in medicine as she is not a citizen of the United States.

 

Article 9 of Mental Health Law provides that patients who object to any

proposed medical treatment or procedure may not be treated over their

objections except emergency treatment where the patient is presently

dangerous and the proposed treatment is the most appropriate.

 

Upon a patient’s objection to involuntary and forcible injection of

drugs, Mental Hygiene Law requires that an independent review be

conducted by a physician who specializes in psychiatry and is not an

employee of the facility. In order to administer antipsychotic

medication to an involuntarily committed patient over objection, there

must be a judicial determination that the state has established by

“clear and convincing evidence” that the patient does not have the

capacity to decide for herself whether or not to take the medication and

that the treatment was narrowly tailored to give substantive effect to

the patient’s liberty interests.

 

No Constitutional Oath

 

According to Alexandra, Rodriguez wrote that she was “preservative about

her ‘legal rights’ and was being ‘railroaded’ since being ‘yanked at my

doorstep for no reason’. Alexandra said Rodriguez found that she was

paranoid because she repeatedly requested to see the documents

pertaining to her case including her medical chart and was “‘insistent

that she had not had the opportunity to defend herself in a grand jury,

continually making references to legal terminology”’, stating she had

done her research about the case and that the previous judge, Keefe, was

a “de facto employee with no constitutional oath”.

 

While Gerber and Kelley had claimed that Alexandra did not understand

courtroom procedure, Rodriguez found that she was paranoid because she

was “preservative about her legal rights” and although a review of the

report shows that Alexandra was extremely specific and lucid about her

rights, said that she had “poor insight into her alleged illness and

into her legal situation”.

 

Like Gerber and Kelley, Rodriguez maintained that “Ms. Barely…..will

likely be unable to cooperate with his defense counsel and thereby be

unable to address his legal her legal (sic) needs”.

 

Although the NYS Department of Health confirms that Rodriguez is not a

licensed physician in New York State, she has signed a sworn affidavit

under the title of physician, claiming to be licensed. A DOH spokesman

said a resident could sign MD after their name but that did not make

them a licensed physician.

 

Rodriguez failed to respond to The Empire Journal’s request for comment.

 

Both Sanon and Rodriguez claimed to be the treating physicians of

Alexandra, although neither had ever seen her before her involuntary

hospitalization at Kirby.

 

Although the law provides that an attorney must be present during the

physician’s examination of the patient, according to Mental Hygiene

Legal Services, no legal counsel was present for Alexandra.

 

Based on the sworn affidavits of Sanon and Rodriguez, both of which

allegedly contain false written statements, Hicks and Kirby filed a

petition with the New York Supreme Court for a final order to forcibly

administer a myriad of drugs including antipsychotic medication to

“Darlene Barely”.

 

At the hearing held Oct. 6 inside Kirby Forensic Psychiatric Center,

Alexandra’s MHLS attorney Feerick advised Supreme Court judge Martin

Schoenfeld that the state and Kirby had failed to comply with statutory

and case law in regard to comply with the safeguards guaranteed a

patient such as legal counsel being present during the examination done

by two board certified physicians as well as a hearing being held that

was open to the general public. She said due to the violations of law

and Alexandra’s rights, that all orders and hearings must be vacated.

 

Although Mental Hygiene Law is specific that the independent review

cannot be conducted by a physician employed by the facility, Feerick

said that too was violated as the primary evidence presented against

Alexandra was the testimony of a psychiatrist employed by the hospital

who had not treated the patient.

 

Feerick demonstrated to Judge Schoenfeld that the hearing had been

illegally constituted because affidavits filed with the order to show

cause to involuntarily administer medication to Alexandra were not in

compliance as it is required that two board certified physicians examine

the patient in the presence of an attorney when the state wants to

medicate a prisoner involuntarily.

 

According to Frederick, who was present, despite the Supreme Court and

state Court of Appeals ruling that all rights must be fully complied

with for forced medication, Judge Schoenfeld said he didn’t feel that

the repeated violations were important.

 

Despite patients rights being spelled out by law, according to

Frederick, “Barely’s” attorney was not allowed to cross examine the

state’s only witness and no evidence or testimony of any emergency or

violent behavior by Alexandra was presented as required before the court

can order confinement and forced drug treatment. Neither Alexandra nor

her witness were allowed to testify. By law, there must be three or more

documented violent occurrences before such confinement and forced

treatment can be ordered. In a 2000 decision by the state Supreme Court,

it was held “in order for a hospital to detain a patient for involuntary

psychiatric care, it must be demonstrated by clear and convincing

evidence that the patient is mentally ill and in need of continued,

supervised care and treatment, and that the patient poses a substantial

threat of physical harm to herself and/or others”.

 

The records show that no such evidence or testimony was presented to the

court about Barely/Early/Alexandra.

 

Alleged False Documents By State

 

According to Frederick between Oct. 6 and 11, he obtained confirmation

from three independent sources, in addition to Alexandra, that there had

been material denials of due process as well as the submission of false

documents by the state.

 

On Nov. 16, Feit advised Judge Keefe and the Albany County district

attorney’s office that Keefe had committed Early/Alexandra to the

custody of OMH before he could make application for a hearing or file a

writ of habeas corpus and she was removed from Albany County.

 

“Initially, by making telephone calls to the MHLS attorneys who work

under the aegis of the various Appellate Divisions to provide legal

assistance to those confined, I sought to make every effort to assure

that Ms. Early would be treated humanely and fairly…….Since that date, I

have learned of the tragic and horrible events that have ensured for Ms.

Early……

 

Feit told Keefe that the allegations against Alexandra were non-violent

and “hardly justifying the cruel way in which she has been treated”. He

asked for a preliminary hearing in the matter.

 

People who have not been found guilty of any crime but are simply being

“evaluated” are being intermixed at Kirby with convicted serial killers

and rapists, Frederick says.

 

He charges that political dissents are being drugged and held for years

in New York without a trial in violation of their constitutional rights.

 

‘The defendant is a thorn in the side of Albany officials”, Frederick

says. He says that Alexandra is being punished for exercising her

political free speech rights. He says the required elements of criminal

intent to receive some “ill-gotten gain obviously are missing since she

is calling them and challenging their authority”.

 

‘If it can happen to Darlene, anybody, you or I, could be made to

disappear in this dark hole without ever having a trial. This is the

exact same technique both Hitler and Stalin used on political dissidents

and others”.

 

Frederick points out that Alexandra’s challenge of political authority

is the “kind of up-front political protest and political position that

the DMV doesn’t really have a valid constitutional right to regulate

travel. If officials have a problem with their legal foundation for

regulating travel, they need to get the proper process going to solve

it, not illegally putting away a free speech challenger”.

 

He maintains that if Turley and other officials cannot deal with

dissenters in a democracy in a fair way they should not be in their

positions. “In New York, they will cut you a break as a robber or

murderer but god forbid you challenge the authority of the Evil Empire

State or one of its henchmen”.

 

The courts have held that the Fifth Amendment Due Process clause permits

the government to involuntarily administer antipsychotic drugs to a

mentally ill defendant facing serious criminal charges in order to

render that defendant competent to stand trial but only if treatment is

medically appropriate, is substantially unlikely to have side effects

that may undermine the fairness of the trial and taking account less

intrusive alternatives. Assuming that the defendant was not dangerous to

himself or others, he could not be ordered involuntarily to take

antipsychotic drugs solely to render him competent to stand trial

without consideration of important questions about trial related side

effects and risk of drugs to be used.

 

The higher courts have found that a government may not deprive any

person of liberty without due process of law

 

According to recent reports, in an attempt to counteract increasing

political activism and dissent with government, in an attempt to stifle

public opposition and attempts at reform, police agencies nationwide are

simply levying false charges against their critics, labeling them

“mental” in an attempt to not only discredit them but to “teach them a

lesson”

 

The American Civil Liberties Union says that dozens of activists and

organizations have been subjected to the scrutiny of the FBI and have

initiated Freedom of Information Law requests to determine the scope and

purpose of the FBI.

 

The FBI denies singling out individuals or organizations for

surveillance or investigation based solely on activities protected by

the Constitutional guarantees of free speech.

 

December 9, 2004

 

© The Empire Journal

 

--

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