Is the 14-Year-Old Shooting Suspect in West Oak Middle School, SC Another Failed Outcome of Mental Health Treatment?
The 14-year old suspect in the Townville Elementary School shooting was expelled from West-Oak Middle School after bringing a hatchet to school last year, according to news reports.
West Oak Middle School expulsion policy requires the school to refer the student to the department of juvenile justice based on the fact he brought a weapon to school. The DJJ process clearly indicates the suspect would have undergone a mental health evaluation and had plenty of access to mental health treatment prior to the shooting.
What’s not clear, did the suspect receive mental health services and psychiatric drug treatment prior to the Hatchet incident at school? It is often difficult to gain access to early mental health treatment records. However, the public did gain access to the Sandy Hook mass shooter’s early mental health treatment records through the Child Advocate’s report, but didn’t gain access to the last five years leading up to the mass murder at Sandy Hook. The State is still withholding those records.
Lanza’s primary treating psychiatrist, Paul Fox, who surrendered his license to practice is now facing felon charges for sexual abuse of a former patient. Fox told police during the Sandy Hook police investigation he still retains the billing records, but destroyed the actual mental health records of Lanza. Fox failed to follow record retention law and public notification law that he was no longer practicing. Connecticut didn’t enforce either one of those laws.
The Child Advocate’s report on Lanza actually showed he had plenty of access to mental health and participated in the birth to three mental health programs. In addition, Lanza was home bound through Newtown public school system and under the care of discredited psychiatrist Fox at that time. Dr. Robert King of Yale Child Study Center also treated Adam Lanza. Dr. King is heavily involved in landmark mental health research that involves FDA approval.
The public would benefit from mental health billing information, the Yale file, and the diary of the mother, Nancy Lanza, found at the crime scene.
Dr. Robert King and Nancy Koenig of Yale claimed that Nancy Lanza refused treatment for her son; however, the police report indicates that Nancy Lanza reported an adverse drug event to Yale’s Koenig and Dr. King. There was no indication that Dr. King or Koenig advised Nancy Lanza to report the adverse drug event to the FDA, instead Dr. King and Koenig of Yale labeled Nancy Lanza as noncompliant.
Time again the school shootings are linked to mental health “treatment” and deadly outcomes. This is an excellent time to question the condition of the mental health system, and ask two fundamental questions. Is the policies pushed in the aftermath of Sandy Hook of aggressive outpatient services, and “shy of forced medication” actually increasing our mental health crisis and the deadly outcomes? The second question, Are public health departments, like Connecticut, protecting behavioral health vendors, bad psychiatrists, and covering up dangerous, experimental mental health treatment on children in crisis?
AbleChild contacted the SC Anderson County Sheriff’s office to encourage them to explore the psychiatric drug link, question the treating psychiatrist, and investigate any behavioral health vendor involvement. AbleChild also asked if the suspect’s blood was taken at time of arrest. The Sheriff’s office thanked AbleChild for our suggestions and didn’t have the information on the blood work up at this time.
14 year old shooter, Adam Lanza, Anderson Country Sheriff, Dr. Robert King, Informed Consent, Jeffrey Osborne, mental health treatment, Nancy Lanza, Paul Fox, Sandy Hook Advisory Commission, West Oak Middle School, Yale Child Study Center