New York – NY Sex Criminals Lose Pataki Psych Transfer Case

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    FILE- In this Oct. 31, 2007 file photo, former New York Gov. George Pataki addresses the United Nations General Assembly in New York. Six former prison inmates are suing Pataki and other state officials, accusing them of abusing their authority eight years ago by summarily transferring them to psychiatric facilities after they completed their prison terms. Pataki is expected to testify early in the week of July 20, 2013. (AP Photo/David Karp, File)New York – In a case pitting convicted sex offenders against former Gov. George Pataki, a jury decided Wednesday that the three-term governor didn’t violate the criminals’ rights by authorizing a program to involuntarily commit them to mental institutions after they completed their sentences.

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    Pataki wasn’t in court to hear the verdict. A message left with his attorney wasn’t immediately returned.

    The case stemmed from Pataki’s decision in 2005 to have heath and prison officials evaluate the worst sex offenders for possible civil commitment once released from prison. The practice was halted in 2006 after a state court found that several men who were committed should have been entitled to hearings before it happened. Some remained in psychiatric institutions for years afterward.

    Six of the sex offenders sued Pataki and other officials in 2008, claiming the officials had abused their authority by denying them their freedom.

    The Sexually Violent Predator initiative was a “sham” attempt to “bypass the Constitution,” plaintiffs’ attorney Reza Rezvani said in closing arguments Monday. “You know that the Constitution applies to everybody. … No one is saying don’t lock up the bad guys. But you do it right and you’re fair.”

    Pataki’s attorney, Abbe Lowell, told the jury that the most shocking part of the case was “what the plaintiffs did, not what the defendants did.”

    At trial, jurors heard testimony of plaintiffs who served lengthy prison sentences for sex assaults on minors and crimes. One, Louis Massei, testified that once he was committed to psychiatric care, he and the other convicts were never given any treatment.

    “We were separated from the other patients,” Massei said. “We were treated like ‘the experiment.'”

    Pataki testified he authorized evaluations of sex offenders before they were freed as a way to protect the public, not to rob them of liberty. Defense lawyers noted that of the nearly 800 inmates examined, fewer than 200 were committed to mental institutions.

    The lawsuit had alleged that Pataki and officials with the Office of Mental Health and Department of Correctional Services conspired to deprive them of their constitutional rights. But the former governor claimed he “didn’t know what law was being used or what particular part of the law was being used” to implement the program, nor did he pay close attention to how it was carried out.

    “I personally never had any contact with DOCS or OMH, so no, I didn’t direct them directly,” he said.


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    5 Comments
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    LEEAVE
    LEEAVE
    10 years ago

    i wish we can bring pataki back!

    look on all these clowns around now

    I_Am_Me
    I_Am_Me
    10 years ago

    He was 100% right for sending them for psychiatric evaluation, that others didn’t do it is their problem not his

    Ragner
    Ragner
    10 years ago

    Hooray for extrajudicial incarceration!

    Let’s all cheer on the government as it locks people up without due process!

    Of course it will never happen to me – so why should I care, right?