Huge bill for husband in state mental hospital
Citing a 1967 law, California
wants a Galt woman to pay $335,000 for holding disturbed spouse in facility
By Jim Sanders - Bee Capitol Bureau
Published 12:00
am PDT Sunday, May 6, 2007
Story appeared in MAIN NEWS section, Page
A4
Honorato Rodriguez had a history of mental
illness and delusions that neighbors were out to get him when he lobbed a
Molotov cocktail over the fence of his Galt home.
Nobody was hurt and no
home burned down, but the dangerous act landed the 55-year-old Rodriguez, a
victim of Parkinson's disease, in a state mental hospital.
Rodriguez's care is
costing $455 per day. His wife, Gloria, a seasonal cannery worker whose only
major asset is the family's 30-year-old, three-bedroom home, is billed for
the amount under state law.
"If I had the money,
I would pay it -- but I don't have the money," Gloria Rodriguez said of
demands by the state Department of Developmental Services for payment of
$335,000 owed by May 2006.
The Rodriguez case is
sparking questions about whether, and under what conditions, the state should
seize assets from families that could neither prevent, nor predict, a violent
act from an insane relative.
Murderers, rapists and
robbers don't pay for their imprisonment, but Rodriguez and others too
mentally unstable to be guilty of any crime are liable for massive state
hospital costs.
Rodriguez was sentenced
to state care by Sacramento Judge Thomas Cecil, who found him not guilty of
arson by reason of insanity. Family members did not choose the location or
the duration of the placement, yet they must pay for it.
Assemblyman Guy Houston,
R-San Ramon, recently wrote a letter asking state agencies temporarily to
suspend collection efforts.
"It is
unconscionable that the state of California is allowed to collect money under
these circumstances," he wrote.
Houston said he understands, and does not
necessarily oppose, efforts to reimburse taxpayers for bankrolling public
services.
"There has to be a
middle ground," he said.
Kirsten Macintyre,
spokeswoman for the state Department of Mental Health, said the agency is
bound by state law to collect from the Rodriguezes
but is trying to do so sensitively.
"This is the law and
we have to follow it," she said, adding that she does not know lawmakers'
rationale for passing the reimbursement statute in 1967.
Targeting patients'
families provides taxpayers with some hedge against very expensive care not
covered by Medi-Cal. Collections last year totaled $3.3 million from 230
patients.
The state initially filed
court papers seeking the entire Rodriguez estate, which would include the
home, but later issued a settlement offer that would place a lien against
half the residence and not force Gloria Rodriguez to move.
"There was never any
talk about taking her house from her, as long as she was living,"
Macintyre said.
The settlement offer
would resolve current debts, but not necessarily Rodriguez's future state
hospital costs of $166,000 annually.
Rodriguez is not expected
to regain his sanity any time soon, if ever, raising the specter of
astronomical expenses that could jeopardize assets of his two grown children,
Raquel, 29, and Fabian, 28.
"You know, it's OK
if I lose my house," Gloria Rodriguez said. "But they're just
starting."
A 2005 psychiatric report
in Rodriguez's court file describes his delusions as "severe and
pervasive." It mentions an incident in which he tried to head-butt a
nurse while in custody.
"Unfortunately, the
Parkinson's disease is going to inexorably worsen in time," the report
said.
Gloria Rodriguez recalls
happier times. She met Honorato when both were 22.
Both had immigrated from Mexico legally. He was a student in an
English class where she was an aide, she said.
The Rodriguezes
married in 1975. Honorato, a high school dropout,
worked various jobs at a farm, dairy and a company that made rubber mats.
"He was a good
person," Gloria Rodriguez said. "He was always a family
person."
Honorato was stricken with Parkinson's
disease at 37 or 38. His speech became slurred, his limbs stiff, and he often
had trouble walking, she said.
His mental condition also
deteriorated.
"It was mostly like
the neighbors were out to get him," she recalled. "He thought they
were looking through the windows, or at night, he could hear them jumping
over the house and trying to get in the house."
Gloria Rodriguez does not
know what provoked her husband, who had no criminal record, to toss a Molotov
cocktail into the backyard of her neighbor in July 2002.
He ultimately was
sentenced to eight years in a state hospital or until he regains his sanity.
Rodriguez's psychiatric
report from Atascadero State Hospital said he allegedly had
"bashed in the windows of his neighbor's truck" prior to the arson
and "chased the neighbor's children with a stick."
The longtime Galt resident
currently is housed at Napa State Hospital.
Rodriguez's ailment,
Parkinson's disease, is a degenerative neurological disorder for which there
is no known cure.
Lew Uhler,
president of the National Tax Limitation Committee, which supports seeking reimbursement
for other programs, said there is no compelling reason to charge the Rodriguezes.
Taxpayers should pay to
confine insane offenders, as they do for regular prisoners, because both pose
the same danger to public safety, he said.
"The only distinction
is mental competence," Uhler said.
Attorney Randy Rosá, representing the Rodriguezes,
argues the state's reimbursement laws may violate constitutional rights to
due process and equal protection.
While some mentally
disordered offenders are placed in a state hospital, others land in a
different type of locked facility -- licensed by the state, funded largely
through Medi-Cal and operating under less stringent reimbursement statutes.
State law sets no limits
on a state hospital patient's cumulative bills, and it makes a patient's
spouse, parents and children jointly and separately liable, he said.
"It just strains my
belief in a fair and moral system," Rosá said.
About the writer:
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The Bee's Jim Sanders can be reached at (916) 326-5538 or jsanders@sacbee.com.
Original
article and photos are at http://www.sacbee.com/391/story/168996.html
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