Billy's Story
THE U.S.
IS A ONE MISTAKE COUNTRY FOR THE MENTALLY ILL;
The Federal
judge looked down sternly upon the young man who was standing before him
awaiting his sentence for downloading images with pornographic pictures
of children from the internet. Billy had accepted a guilty plea
to evade the 15-20 year sentence threatened by the FBI agents who were
looking for an “easy kill” that would enhance their department’s
conviction statistics. The judge had asked the young man’s lawyer,
and the young man to explain his history of mental illness, its effect
upon his life, and medications prescribed by the series of psychiatrists
who had tried to help him cope with his bipolar illness. The
young man told of his early years, being abused and abandoned by his
mother at six months of age, and his subsequent adoption by a stable
family that had given him the love and security that he constantly
sought. He told of being embarrassed every day in school
because of his learning difficulties and lack of social skills that left
him often without “real” friends and a social life. He told of
the dark periods of deep depression when he was totally incapacitated,
caring about absolutely nothing, including his own life. These
would not be followed by a period of normal feelings, but by
periods of extreme mania when he was driven by racing thoughts that he
possessed knowledge unknown by anyone else; when he did not have time to
sleep because of all of the important things he knew and needed to do
that no one else could do and a constant euphoria that drove him to
self-medicate with alcohol and frenzied activity until he collapsed
exhausted. Hospitalization usually followed as a team of mental
health professionals worked patiently to put him back on the track of
normalcy. He told of the loneliness of early adulthood where he
spent endless hours on the computer because there, on the social
websites, you could be whomever you wanted to be, and people were so
accepting and friendly. But, he also told of how the loneliness
and rejection by other young adults coupled with the sexual desires that
are normal for a young man led him to seek the pornographic websites in
search of sexual stimulation and gratification. With shame and
embarrassment he related to the judge and others in the hushed courtroom
how he first stumbled upon nude images of young children, some in
sexual poses with adults. Billy ashamedly told how these images
captured his attention and, finding some pictures that were free, he
setup a high speed file transfer and stored a large number of images on
his personal computer.
In tears, and
expressing extreme regret, Billy acknowledged his guilt and asked for
probation so that he could get treatment for his bipolar illness and
make a fresh start.
The judge,
shifting to his stern business face and posture said simply, “I know all
about mental illness and I understand the terrible impact it has had on
your life. I see where you have been under the treatment of
mental health professionals for much of your life and have struggled to
live a normal life. However, you broke the law, and the Federal
sentencing guidelines for this offense are clear. I see no reason
to depart from those guidelines, nor does the pre-sentencing officer or
the prosecutor. Therefore, I sentence you to the full sentence of
five years incarceration in a Federal correctional facility, with 5
years probation following. You will be required to register on the
sex offender registry immediately upon your release from prison.
Do you have anything else to say?” Billy’s apologies and
requests for leniency fell on deaf ears because many people lie, saying
they are mentally ill when standing before the judge in a last ditch
effort to avoid a long prison sentence. A last minute attempt by
his poorly prepared and somewhat disinterested defense attorney to tell
of the support that Billy would receive while on probation was a waste
of words. With the words,” I know about mental illness, however…”
Billy’s fate for life was sealed. Not only were his freedoms taken
away for the 5 years of his prison sentence, but for the rest of his
life. The statutory requirements that he maintain an open record
of his whereabouts on the publicly accessible Sex Offender’s Registry in
reality equates to a living death penalty. Where are you going to
live if no one will rent you an apartment, or even a room because your
name is on “the register”? It makes no difference how hard you try
to explain that you never have inappropriately touched, or even
approached a child, nor that you try to explain that you want
relationships with other people your own age, not children. Acute
mental illness is dismissed as an excuse, not accepted as a disease that
needs treatment, not punishment!
Who will hire
you to work for them when they fear you are bad for business or that
people will target your business for vandalism or a boycott because you
have a “sex offender” working for you? Going to school and
starting over is not an option for you after you’ve completed your
sentence, but it is for the released murderer, kidnapper, and every
other former prisoner who paid their debt to society, even though they
are more than 4 times more likely to reoffend than you are! A
person convicted of a “sex offense” is never free again, and their
debt to society is never fully paid under the current spate of laws
enacted by those who fueled the fear and ignorance of our
lawmakers to pass laws denying those who are no threat to society their
basic freedoms.