The
words come haltingly, the sentences trailing off into barely
comprehensible asides: a story about an abusive father who drank himself
to death, proud talk of his songwriting abilities and childhood
memories of an older brother he still adores.
But
Franklin Frye, 68, after all these years, speaks clearly about one thing: the arrest.
“They locked me up for no reason,” he said. “They never found the necklace on me I don’t know if they ever found it.”
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It didn’t matter. Four decades ago, police charged him with stealing a $20 necklace, but
Mr. Frye
was found not competent to stand trial. If he’d been found guilty, he
would’ve faced a fine or perhaps a short jail sentence. Instead, he’s
spent most of his life inside the District’s psychiatric hospital, St.
Elizabeth’s, feeling frustrated with, and forgotten by, the very system
charged with looking after his welfare.
It’s a case that raises
tricky questions about fairness within the criminal justice system and
life inside St. Elizabeth’s. Indeed, for years the court system simply
lost track of him.
Dead docket
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Through the D.C. public defender’s office,
Mr. Frye
sought unconditional release in 2008, but his motion was filed on the
docket of a dead judge, where it remained until earlier this year — with
no apology or explanation from court officials.
“You end up being
caught up in the system in a way you wouldn’t have if you were just
guilty. It’s a tragedy,” said Steve Salzburg, a law professor at George
Washington University and former deputy assistant attorney general.
Mr. Frye,
who spoke publicly about his case for the first time in a recent
interview with The Washington Times, is entitled to petition a judge for
his release once a year. But it took nearly six years for his 2008
motion to receive any attention.
Hospital
officials insist they separately review his files on their own and that
previous attempts at releasing him into the community have failed.
“
Mr. Frye is receiving appropriate care,” D.C. Department of Behavioral Health chief of staff
Phyllis Jones wrote in an email.
But elder brother
William Frye said nobody should have to eke out their entire lives in a city psychiatric ward. While he doesn’t deny that
Franklin
suffers from mental illness, he believes life in the hospital itself
has made him worse, that anybody would “go crazy” if they had to spend
more than four decades inside St. Elizabeth’s.
Citing
improvements, the hospital recently emerged from a consent decree that
called for monitoring by the Justice Department. But during
Mr. Frye’s decades in psychiatric care, the hospital has been the subject of numerous investigations into violence, abuse and neglect.
Even
in fiscal 2013, there were 56 “high severity” physical assaults at the
hospital, according to records — a decrease from 104 cases in 2012 and
136 in 2011.
William Frye
has printouts of a years-old government audit that highlights problems
at St. Elizabeth’s, but said he doesn’t need statistics to tell him that
his brother was better before his arrest. He said
Franklin Frye was well enough to hold down steady work as a maintenance man at a post office around the time when he was arrested in 1970.
“Now
he can hardly stand up because of all the medications he’s on, and I
don’t think they can justify why they’re giving him all of this
medicine,”
William Frye said. “He’s much worse now.”
Abuse charges
“I act normal, just like the average person,”
Franklin Frye
said, speaking during a recent visit to his brother’s house. He’s
permitted occasional supervised daytrips from the hospital to visit
family.
Mostly though,
Franklin Frye
talks about the hospital. He complains that the staff “lies on you” and
takes away privileges for reasons that aren’t clear to him.
During
his four decades inside the hospital, he said he’s been assaulted,
robbed and stabbed. He doesn’t have documents to back up his
accusations, but he pulls up his shirt and points to two scars on each
side of his abdomen. Then he points to another scar across his
collarbone, where he said he was stabbed with a bottle.
Mr. Frye
speaks matter-of-factly about violence but becomes more animated about
seemingly minor injustices: new clothes and shoes that his brother
bought for him that go missing, only later to be spotted in hallways
worn by other patients.
Hospital officials say they can’t discuss any health-related information without a waiver from
Mr. Frye. A lawyer appointed as his legal guardian did not return phone messages. But
William Frye
said he believes his brother’s scars came from inside St. Elizabeth’s,
if only because that’s where he’s spent most of his life.
“He’s been trying to fight for what he wants for so long,” said
William Frye,
a retired city utility worker-turned-pastor. “He’s like [a] junkyard
dog, and he keeps calling you over and over and over, because he knows
he’s right. He’s been abused and neglected and rejected for so long,
that’s all he knows.”
Hospital claims improvement
Ms. Jones said officials reviewed “all records available to us” and did not see incidents like those
Mr. Frye described to The Times.
“What his record shows is that when he’s at the hospital, he was better,”
Ms. Jones said.
“
Mr. Frye’s record shows that
Mr. Frye
has a serious mental illness,” she added. “Over the last 40 years at
the hospital, he’s been at all levels of security in the hospital.”
She said there have been “multiple” attempts to reintegrate
Mr. Frye back into the community over the years. She said officials don’t want to keep people in the hospital.
“He’s been out in day treatment programs. He’s been out of the hospital in a community setting. Each time,
Mr. Frye
was unable to maintain that way of living and was back at the
hospital,” she said. “He’s been struggling with mental illness all of
his life.”
The median stay among the hospital’s roughly 300 patients is 17 months, but
Mr. Frye is one of a few dozen who have remained there for 20 years or more, according to hospital statistics.
Four years after
Mr. Frye’s
arrest, another D.C. man, Michael Jones, faced charges for trying to
steal a jacket from a department store. He eventually appealed to the
courts after he could not win his release, arguing it was
unconstitutional to be confined longer than the term of the jail
sentence he would’ve faced if found guilty.
But in 1983, the Supreme Court, in the case
Jones
v. U.S., ruled in a 5-4 decision that there was “no necessary
correlation” between the length of a “hypothetical” criminal sentence
and how long it takes to recover from insanity.
System breakdown
Silas Wasserstrom, a Georgetown law professor who argued
Mr. Jones‘ case, said in an email that ruling means
Mr. Frye can be held on the basis of a commitment until he’s found no longer mentally ill, and he has the burden of proving that.
That’s exactly what
Mr. Frye’s
lawyer at the public defender’s office argued in a motion filed April
22, 2008, which landed on the docket of Judge John Garrett Penn. The
problem was that Penn had died six months earlier of cancer, and the
case gathered dust for the better part of the next decade.
Contrast
that with another St. Elizabeth’s patient, would-be presidential
assassin John Hinckley Jr., whose lawyers filed dozens of motions over
the years as they fought for, and won, increasing freedoms for their
client. He is now permitted to go on trips for weeks at a time outside
of the hospital on unsupervised shopping trips, movie outings and hikes.
Hospital
officials say each patient is examined individually and that nobody
receives special treatment, but there’s little doubt Mr. Hinckley’s case
was advanced in court by his paid legal team, which kept it fresh in
the eyes of the federal judicial system.
David Sklansky, a former federal prosecutor and now professor at Stanford University, said
Mr. Frye’s case exposes problems in the system, from the public defenders to the courts.
“If
they didn’t follow up because they forgot about the case, that’s a
serious breakdown,” he said. “But regardless of the reason whether the
public defender had a reason not to follow up, it’s hard to see any good
reason for the court to take so long to reassign the case.”
An attorney for the public defender’s office did not return messages seeking comment.
The U.S. attorney’s office declined to discuss the specifics of
Mr. Frye’s
case, but spokesman Bill Miller said that, in general, government
lawyers don’t take a stance on a case until a hearing is set and the
hospital sends over records.
With no hearing set in
Mr. Frye’s case, that was never triggered.
Asked
why court officials never transferred the case, Shelly Snook,
administrative assistant to Chief Judge Richard W. Roberts, said, “We
are looking into
Mr. Frye’s case, and we will take any action that’s appropriate, depending on what we find.”
Government wants to keep
At the beginning of this year, the public defender filed another motion for
Mr. Frye’s unconditional release. It’s unclear what prompted the renewed push for release.
The government at that point did oppose the motion, with lawyers saying in documents that
Mr. Frye’s
“inability to comply with hospital rules and prescribed medication has
resulted in his extended confinement in a hospital setting.”
In a separate report to the court, the hospital said
Mr. Frye
suffers from a host of mental illnesses and conditions, including
“schizo-affective disorder, bipolar type,” leading him to experience
paranoia and suspicions as well as irritability and mood fluctuations.
Twice in six months,
Mr. Frye has had “instances of physical aggression,” though neither resulted in a serious outcome, according to a court report.
Recently, lawyers and the judge agreed to a conditional release instead. Under that gradual plan,
Mr. Frye
would go on trips to a day-treatment program and later to a community
residential facility. But each step toward full release depends on
whether officials say
Mr. Frye follows the rules.
William Frye
said he’s not sure how his family will be able to look after his
brother, underscoring the need for a safety net to care for those with
mental illnesses after release.
He said the cumulative impact of four decades inside St. Elizabeth’s has taken a toll on his brother’s mental health.
William Frye said he only recently learned that his brother attends Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, even though he said
Franklin has never had a drinking problem.
“He goes there to get away from the madness in the ward,”
William Frye
said. “It’s the only place where he met with people who treated him
like a human being and who would be willing to listen to what he had to
say. I mean, everybody wants to have some level of respect, even in St.
Elizabeth’s.”