LAW OF THE LAND
Federal court OKs forced drugging
Defendant ordered to take anti-psychotic medication
Posted: March 22, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern
By Jon Dougherty
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
A federal appeals court has ruled 2-1 that a dentist charged with
Medicaid fraud can be forced to take anti-psychotic drugs to render him
competent to stand trial.
The U.S. Eighth
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled March 7 that a pair of lower courts were
correct in determining that Charles T. Sell, a St. Louis-area dentist, was
not competent to stand trial and, therefore, should be forced to take
anti-psychotic drugs to "restore" competency.
"The government may not constitutionally bring an incompetent defendant
to trial, so the only way the government may try Sell is by restoring his
competency," the court said.
Sell and his wife were arrested May 16, 1997, on 56 counts of mail fraud,
six counts of Medicaid fraud and one count of money laundering. Since then,
Sell has also been charged with conspiring to kill an FBI agent and a former
employee who is a witness against him.
He was released on bond a few months later, in August, but in January
federal officials filed to revoke his bond, charging that he violated the
conditions of his release.
Then, when he was brought before a U.S. district judge, he "screamed,
shouted and used racial epithets" in court. The judge tried to proceed but
when she did, "Sell leaned towards her and spit directly in her face," the
court said.
Nevertheless, a doctor's group that filed an amicus brief on Sell's
behalf called the court's decision "shocking" and "inhumane."
"All the government needs are allegations and a cooperative psychiatrist
to forcibly drug any citizen," said Andrew Schlafly, general counsel for the
Association of American Physicians and
Surgeons. "It's a shocking, inhumane decision."
While acknowledging that "the evidence does not support a finding that
Sell posed a danger to himself or others," the majority opinion still found
that "charges of fraud" alone are "serious" enough to justify forced
medication, AAPS said.
A similar case is pending before the same court to allow the state to
forcibly medicate a convicted murderer for execution.
"It's appalling that the court will drug a man presumed to be innocent,
even if it's illegal to do the same thing to a convicted killer," Schlafly
said. "It's unprecedented to allow prosecutors to drug peaceful defendants
presumed to be innocent."
At the January 1998 hearing, however, the court said it had "received
evidence" that Sell's "mental condition was deteriorating." One psychiatrist
told the court that Sell "soon could become a danger to himself and others."
More than a year later, at a Feb. 9, 1999, hearing, both Sell's
psychologist and a psychologist for the government "diagnosed Sell with
delusional disorder.
"
The majority opinion in this month's decision, led by Judge Pasco M.
Bowman, concluded that the court found that "medical evidence presented
indicated a reasonable probability that Sell will be fairly able to
participate in his trial" if he were involuntarily medicated.
Judge Kermit E. Bye dissented, arguing that "the charges against Sell are
not sufficiently serious to forcibly inject him with anti-psychotic drugs on
the chance it will make him competent to stand trial."
"While the government possesses an interest in bringing a defendant to
trial," Bowman said, "I do not believe every charge is sufficient" to force
defendants to take medication.
The AAPS also said it was alarmed by the length of time Sell has been
incarcerated without being tried and convicted of any crimes.
"There's no good reason why Dr. Sell has been held so long without trial,
and this decision will most likely prolong his imprisonment with no end in
sight," Schlafly said. Judge Bye "pointed out that even if Dr. Sell were to
be found guilty, his sentence would be no more than 41 months - one year
less than he's already served."
The Eighth Circuit covers Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska,
North Dakota and South Dakota.
Jon E. Dougherty is a
staff reporter and columnist for WorldNetDaily, and author of the special
report,
"Election 2000: How the Military Vote Was Suppressed."
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