I remember when Soviet dissidents were held in psychiatric hospitals, albeit for much longer periods.
Former
Marine Brandon Raub Sentenced To Up To 30 Days In Psych Ward Over
Facebook Posts
20
August, 2012
The
former Marine who was detained over Facebook posts
critical of the government is
being held in a psychiatric ward, Peter
BacquƩ of
the Richmond
Times-Dispatch reports.
"I'm
currently in John Randolph in the psychiatric ward being held against
my will," Brandon Raub, 26, said in a telephone interview with
the Times-Dispatch.
"They were concerned about me calling for the arrest of
government officials."
Lawyers
from The Rutherford Institute represented Brandon Raub during the
three-hour hearing today at the John Randolph Medical Center and
released a statement, saying
Raub has been sentenced to "up to 30 days’ further confinement
in a VA psych ward" after "government officials
again pointed
to Raub’s
Facebook posts as
the sole reason for their concern and for his continued
incarceration."
According
to Raub's
mother,
authorities from the FBI, Secret Service and Chesterfield County PD
came to their door on Thursday evening, questioned Raub about
his Facebook posts, then handcuffed
him and placed him in a Chesterfield PD squad car before taking
him to John Randolph Psychiatric Hospital in Hopewell, Va.
Both
the FBI and Secret Service said Raub was not arrested or
charged, but the Rutherford Institute statement points out that "if
the police have put handcuffs on you and you’re being held against
your will, that qualifies as an arrest."
When
asked about why Raub was placed in a psychiatric ward, FBI
Richmond spokeswoman told us that the
FBI "had nothing to do with that" and
that the FBI typically doesn't "make determinations such as
that."
"We
went out to interview him because of complaints that our office had
received about people coming across his posts and perceiving them as
threatening so our office along with Chesterfield County Police
Department on Thursday," Rybiski told us. "When
we left we had not arrested him, we had not placed our hands on him,
we did not detain him and we did not charge him."
Secret
Service spokesman Brian Leary said: "The Secret Service assisted
the FBI with the interview. He was not arrested by the Secret
Service. The Secret Service will continue to monitor the situation.
We have no further comment at this time."
The
Chesterfield PD – who
had previously said the situation "was an FBI matter and we
were just there to assist them" – released
this statement (emphasis
ours):
Chesterfield
Police assisted federal authorities in their efforts to
interview Brandon J. Raub on Thursday, Aug. 16. After
speaking to Raub, officers believed him to be in need of further
evaluation.
Chesterfield
officers at the scene contacted Chesterfield Mental Health
Crisis Intervention. Crisis workers recommended that police
take Raub into custody and bring him in for evaluation.
Chesterfield
police took Raub into custody for evaluation in accordance with
Virginia State Code § 37.2-808 Emergency custody.
Raub
was placed in handcuffs after he resisted officers’ attempts to
take him into custody.
Raub
was evaluated by a Chesterfield mental health official, who
determined that he should be held under a temporary [detention] order
and transported to John Randolph Medical Center for additional
evaluation.
Raub
was not arrested and he faces no criminal charges in Chesterfield.
The
Virginia statute states
that a mental health professional can decide to issue a
temporary detention order if "it appears ... that the person (i)
has a mental illness and that there exists a substantial likelihood
that, as a result of mental illness, the person will, in the near
future, (a) cause serious physical harm to himself or others as
evidenced by recent behavior causing, attempting, or threatening harm
and other relevant information, if any, or (b) suffer serious harm
due to his lack of capacity to protect himself from harm or to
provide for his basic human needs, (ii) is in need of hospitalization
or treatment, and (iii) is unwilling to volunteer or incapable of
volunteering for hospitalization or treatment."
"I
really love America, and I think that idea that you can be detained
and sent somewhere without due process and a lawyer … is crazy,"
Raub said.
Raub said
he served as a Marine in Iraq and Afghanistan from 2005 to 2011, was
a combat engineer sergeant and does not own a gun. His mother
said he returned from Afghanistan about a year ago and does not have
PTSD.
Raub wrote
five articles about
economics and the Richmond
Liberty Movement for
the website Don't Tread On Me and his Linked-In
profile says he
owns a small coin business through the Numis
Network.
John
W. Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute, said the
following: “For government officials to not only arrest
Brandon Raub for doing nothing more than exercising his First
Amendment rights but to actually force him to undergo psychological
evaluations and detain him against his will goes against every
constitutional principle this country was founded upon. This should
be a wake-up call to Americans that the police state is here.”

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