Billionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was taken off suicide watch on psychologist's recommendatio
Source: New York Daily News
Sex fiend financier Jeffrey Epstein was approved to be taken off suicide watch by a doctoral-level psychologist at the federal jail where the billionaire ultimately killed himself, a letter from the U.S. Justice Department revealed.
Epstein, 66, had been placed on suicide watch on July 24, after he tried to hang himself in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Lower Manhattan.
But he was later removed from suicide watch after being evaluated by a doctoral-level psychologist who determined that a suicide watch was no longer warranted, according to a letter sent to the Judiciary Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives on Friday.
The letter, dated Thursday, came from Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyds office in response to the committees demands seeking information about Epsteins death.
Read more: https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-psychologist-pulled-epstein-off-suicide-watch-20190824-ca6w7bm5vfgljhmazw647pn7tu-story.html?outputType=amp&__twitter_impression=true
Eliot Rosewater
(31,109 posts)cstanleytech
(26,284 posts)possible that they assisted him with his "suicide".
iluvtennis
(19,851 posts)Devil Child
(2,728 posts)This case stinks.
Eliot Rosewater
(31,109 posts)shit, but, instead, NOTHING.
OF COURSE HE WAS MURDERED
Devil Child
(2,728 posts)Next comes the massive coverup and trying to write off everything as low-level guard incompetence or gee whiz pedos often kill the selves so thats what happened here.
I wish that every piece of shit connected to Epsteins child rape club gets nailed. Doubt that wish will ever come true though.
Kid Berwyn
(14,887 posts)There was a US Attorney, pillar of the GOP community, who thought he was communicating online with a 5-year old childs mother to arrange sex with the little girl. He really was writing with a Michigan sheriffs deputy pretending. The guy was a pillar of the community when he was arrested at the airport carrying a little teddy bear. He soon tried to kill himself, was put on suicide watch, and then left to kill himself on his second try.
The Strange Tale of a Pedophile in the U.S. Justice Department
Legal Schnauzer, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2010
The U.S. Department of Justice generated plenty of strange stories during the George W. Bush years. But one of the strangest involved John David "Roy" Atchison, an assistant U.S. attorney in Pensacola, Florida, who committed suicide after being caught in a pedophilia sting in Detroit.
Atchison's sad story has many connections to Birmingham and Alabama. And it raises this question: How did a guy with a shaky work record and a history of run-ins with the law get hired by the world's supposedly foremost crime-fighting organization? Did Atchison attain his lofty position because he had connections to powerful figures in the Alabama legal world?
Investigative journalist Margie Burns examines these questions, and much more, in a series of posts about the Atchison case at her blog, margieburns.com.
Burns begins with the actions that turned Atchison into a national figure in fall 2007:
This is not the story of a man who engaged in pedophilia for years or decades before being caught. It is the story of a man whipsawed by the strain of living up to a high-achieving family rooted in Birmingham, Ala., whose high-functioning connections assisted him for years in developing a career for which he turned out not to be suited. On Sept. 16, 2007, Assistant U.S. Attorney John David Roy Atchison, serving as a federal prosecutor in the Northern District of Florida, was arrested on credible charges of basically pedophilia. Atchison committed suicide in federal prison Oct. 5.
A dead pedophile might not sound like a tragedy. But Atchison was thought to be participating in a pedophile ring, and his death removed a useful informant from law enforcement resources. The question of how he was enabled to kill himself rather than being preserved for justice is one of the loose ends left hanging in his case.
CONTINUED 'though I wish it didn't...
http://legalschnauzer.blogspot.com/2010/09/strange-tale-of-pedophile-in-us-justice.html
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Margie Burns detailed how the guy rose up through the GOP ranks, warts and all.
Just another lone nut child molester who died of suicide on his second try.
FakeNoose
(32,634 posts)Hmmmm...
BootinUp
(47,141 posts)Yavin4
(35,437 posts)zonkers
(5,865 posts)I think Prince Andrew ought to be subpeoned. Perhaps a new administration will dig deeper. This will not stay buried. Convictions may not be imminent but the truth will come out, at least some of it. The financial forensics of Epstien need to be achieved.
Bernardo de La Paz
(48,999 posts)Igel
(35,300 posts)Otherwise each doctor would have, at most, one dead patient before being bankrupted by either insurance premiums or payouts--or, if he continued, he'd have to charge for his increased malpractice insurance. So this year, a visit's $120. Next year, $190. By year 10, each 20 minute visit costs at least $1200, and that's before labs.
Moreover, esp. with psychiatric patients, a doctor can be very good at what they do and still be outwitted by patients. My BIL duped a few psychologists. Then he beat up his mother, made his mother drive him to her house so he could look for the book of evil, then set her bed on fire to make sure the book of evil was gone. He called his brother to meet him someplace, and once they were all there he went for the ray gun God put under his truck seat so he could kill all the male members of his family and then save their souls by praying for them. When the ray gun wasn't there, God told him it was a test--and to assault his brother.
It's a good thing he didn't have an actual gun in his truck, one that could be confused with a ray gun.
*That* was enough to get him *observed*. And yet when the psychiatrist interviewed him, my BIL was calm, denied it ever happened or that there was anything amiss. If not for the policeman's report on scene describing his altered behavior, and the fact both his brother and his mother said he was psychotic, he'd have been released. And probably eventually listened to the voices in his head again, and done something *really* crazy. At court, the psychologist's report described a sane, rational, calm man as his patient, referred to the reports, and said that this was not uncommon in high-functioning cases of paranoid schizophrenia. One of the symptoms is being *unusually* calm and collected, to mask what was going on. (On the other hand, had my BIL not been upset but merely trusted the system, he'd also have been calm and collected. Sort of like "silence means you're innocent" but also "silence means you're guilty." Catch-22.)
But people need to believe that Epstein was somehow murdered. So whatever the little voices tell them must be true must, well, be true.
Bernardo de La Paz
(48,999 posts)A suicide watch doesn't cost much extra, compared to the public cost already invested in this case: investigation, prosecution, preservation of evidence that might (or probably not) prove Epstein innocent, etc.
A suicide watch doesn't violate his rights or inconvenience him.
In the age of #metoo and "grab her by the", it is absolutely necessary to get such cases right. Thus err on the side of extra caution.
Historic NY
(37,449 posts)it was an employee, how fucking convenient Doctoral-level, sounds like someone in still in school with a PT job. Why not a psychiatrist?
Someone needs to see what the put on the following form.
[link:https://www.usmarshals.gov/prisoner/assessment_tool.pdf|
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,479 posts)A psychologist has a PhD.
TryLogic
(1,722 posts)RobinA
(9,888 posts)In some states one can take the test to become a psychologist with a Masters degree. One could be a Masters level psychologist or a doctoral level psychologist. My guess in the case would be that they are trying to protect themselves by pointing out that the psychologist, or some psychologist involved, has a doctorate.
Hpeer
(3 posts)I had a similar question because Doctoral Level Psychologist sounded very odd.
So I went to the Bureau Of Prisons site and looked at job descriptions.
A BOP Psychologist is a GS-12 or 13 with a starting salary around $67,000. He is NOT required to be licensed. He is required to have met all requisites for a PhD. So that sounds like not even a PhD.
HOWEVER THEY ALSO HAVE INTERNS!!! Apparently an unpaid position.
The requirements description of an INTERN IS
TO be ENROLLED In a DOCTORAL LEVEL PSYCHOLOGIST Program.
There you go, that odd phrase - DOCTORAL LEVEL PSYCHOLOGIST!
https://www.bop.gov/jobs/psychology_internship.jsp
[quote]For more than 40 years, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (Bureau) has trained doctoral-level psychologists. Each of our Psychology Doctoral Internship Programs continues this commitment to training by providing advanced clinical and counseling graduate students with a well-rounded, high-quality training experience. We seek the clinical or counseling psychology student whose personal career goals and objectives can be strengthened, reinforced, and expedited by the training experiences we provide. [/quote]
[quote]
To be eligible for a doctoral internship program position, applicants must be enrolled at least part-time as an advanced graduate student in a clinical or counseling psychology program leading to a doctoral degree.[/quote]
https://www.bop.gov/jobs/positions/index.jsp?p=Clinical%20Psychologist
SunSeeker
(51,550 posts)Sancho
(9,067 posts)blugbox
(951 posts)To a country that doesn't extradite to the U.S.?
DBoon
(22,357 posts)nt
BlueIdaho
(13,582 posts)Of Dr. Billy Barrs Brain Gym and Rope Emporium?
TryLogic
(1,722 posts)especially if the person being evaluated wants to mislead them.
RobinA
(9,888 posts)who isnt completely psychotic or manic can fool pretty much anyone they want to.
Haggis for Breakfast
(6,831 posts)With his record, his history and the people he could name, he should have been under 24 hour surveillance. Powerful people wanted him dead. He had nothing left, so he complied.
YOHABLO
(7,358 posts)LisaL
(44,973 posts)YOHABLO
(7,358 posts)There's more to this than just a simple evaluation by a professional, I can't help but think that something nefarious was at play primarily by dereliction of duty with the intent to do so.
amcgrath
(397 posts)And the prison taking him off the suicide watch list was a mistake.
And removing his cell mate was a mistake.
And leaving a bunk bed tall enough to hang himself was a mistake
And having inexperienced agency prison staff on duty was a mistake
And the fact that they fell asleep was a mistake.
And his previous trial was a mistake.
And the decades long 'undetected' child trafficking career was a mistake.
Mistakes happen. The child abuse scandal has hit all the same sorts of misfortunes.
But when a low level criminal makes a mistake, it leads to their exposure and arrest. When the police and courts make a mistake with an 'average joe' people are wrongly convicted, jailed and sometimes executed.
Whereas the wealthy or politically powerful only ever encounter mistakes that benefit them. Every error in this case and the case in the UK - both decades long - have only benefitted the rich and powerful and has only hurt the case of the victims.
I'd love to know what odds they'd put on that in Vegas
Polybius
(15,390 posts)Prove me wrong. I want to see the taped interview after he was roughed up that day.
Nitram
(22,791 posts)is no valid system in place to separate the quacks from the healers.
bluestarone
(16,914 posts)Something STILL smells really really bad!
hughee99
(16,113 posts)You think they contacted a psychologist as early as February, to get a guy off suicide watch who wasnt going to be in jail for another 5 months?
dchill
(38,474 posts)First time I've ever seen that particular phrase.
Hpeer
(3 posts)I am new to the forum and a little unsure of protocol, etc. so apologies for making a duplicate post, I wanted to make sure you saw this.
What follows is a copy of my reply to a poster above with a similar question.
-
I had a similar question because Doctoral Level Psychologist sounded very odd.
So I went to the Bureau Of Prisons site and looked at job descriptions.
A BOP Psychologist is a GS-12 or 13 with a starting salary around $67,000. He is NOT required to be licensed. He is required to have met all requisites for a PhD. So that sounds like not even a PhD.
HOWEVER THEY ALSO HAVE INTERNS!!! Apparently an unpaid position.
The requirements description of an INTERN IS
TO be ENROLLED In a DOCTORAL LEVEL PSYCHOLOGIST Program.
There you go, that odd phrase - DOCTORAL LEVEL PSYCHOLOGIST!
https://www.bop.gov/jobs/psychology_internship.jsp
[quote]For more than 40 years, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (Bureau) has trained doctoral-level psychologists. Each of our Psychology Doctoral Internship Programs continues this commitment to training by providing advanced clinical and counseling graduate students with a well-rounded, high-quality training experience. We seek the clinical or counseling psychology student whose personal career goals and objectives can be strengthened, reinforced, and expedited by the training experiences we provide. [/quote]
[quote]
To be eligible for a doctoral internship program position, applicants must be enrolled at least part-time as an advanced graduate student in a clinical or counseling psychology program leading to a doctoral degree.[/quote]
https://www.bop.gov/jobs/positions/index.jsp?p=Clinical%20Psychologist
dchill
(38,474 posts)Doctoral level does NOT mean one is a doctor, and it probably means one is not. But that's what we're supposed to assume.
Baltimike
(4,143 posts)Hpeer
(3 posts)Im reposting the below because it was buried down in the reply chain and I thought more people might see it if I move it up here.
The bottom line is this; in the Federal Bureau of Prisons job descriptions the only place Doctoral Level Psychologist appears is in the job description for unpaid Intern. See excerpts and links below.
(And while we are at it - we have still not seen the video outside his jail cell.)
Originally post #37.
-
I had a similar question because Doctoral Level Psychologist sounded very odd.
So I went to the Bureau Of Prisons site and looked at job descriptions.
A BOP Psychologist is a GS-12 or 13 with a starting salary around $67,000. He is NOT required to be licensed. He is required to have met all requisites for a PhD. So that sounds like not even a PhD.
HOWEVER THEY ALSO HAVE INTERNS!!! Apparently an unpaid position.
The requirements description of an INTERN IS
TO be ENROLLED In a DOCTORAL LEVEL PSYCHOLOGIST Program.
There you go, that odd phrase - DOCTORAL LEVEL PSYCHOLOGIST!
https://www.bop.gov/jobs/psychology_internship.jsp
[quote]For more than 40 years, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (Bureau) has trained doctoral-level psychologists. Each of our Psychology Doctoral Internship Programs continues this commitment to training by providing advanced clinical and counseling graduate students with a well-rounded, high-quality training experience. We seek the clinical or counseling psychology student whose personal career goals and objectives can be strengthened, reinforced, and expedited by the training experiences we provide. [/quote]
[quote]
To be eligible for a doctoral internship program position, applicants must be enrolled at least part-time as an advanced graduate student in a clinical or counseling psychology program leading to a doctoral degree.[/quote]
https://www.bop.gov/jobs/positions/index.jsp?p=Clinical%20Psychologist