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I will be surprised if he doesn't get criminal charges at some point, I mean look at what happened to Cosby?Thanks for joining me on the Being Beautifully Honest channel! Leave a comment, like & subscribe for more and check out my other videos.Get your Byte Aligners For a Discount of $100 off and 75% off an impression kit! http://fbuy.me/v/ewill_1Build your credit and earn reward points with your debit card! Check it out and you'll get 50,000 points ($50) if you sign up: https://extra.app/r/ELZABG2EGV...Your beautiful skin is waiting at www.inezelizabethbeauty.com and enter the code PERFECT10 for 10% off your first order! Get THE BEST EYELASH STRIPS here! https://temptinglashes.comJoin me on my other platforms!WEBSITE: WWW.BEINGBEAUTIFULLYHONEST.COMPODCAST: bit.ly/thebbhpcastSUBSCRIBE TO MY OTHER CHANNEL AT bit.ly/ytcmobeautyTHE BEING BEAUTIFULLY HONEST PODCAST DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed in this video and on The Being Beautifully Honest Podcast Youtube Channel are just that, opinions and views. All topics are for entertainment purposes only! All commentary is Alleged.COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER UNDER SECTION 107 OF THE COPYRIGHT ACT 1976, ALLOWANCE IS MADE FOR "FAIR USE" FOR PURPOSES SUCH AS CRITICISM, COMMENT, NEWS REPORTING, TEACHING, SCHOLARSHIP, AND RESEARCH. FAIR USE IS A USE PERMITTED BY COPYRIGHT STATUTE THAT MIGHT OTHERWISE BE INFRINGING.#diddy , #cassie, #seancombs
Guest: Alisa Roth,author :Alisa Roth is a print and radio journalist who has reported extensively on the criminal justice system. Her first book, Insane: America's Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness, investigated the mental health crisis in our courts, jails, and prisons. The New Yorker called it an “essential exposé” and The New York Times said it “is rife with sharp, brutal details that pull the reader beyond the realms of abstract policy debates.” She is former mental health correspondent for American Public Media.1. Describe one example of the worst (e.g. solitary confinement or punishment for self harm) and the best (e.g. PACE, program for accelerated clinical effectiveness) you saw in your travels. How did we get here?2. What is it like for the officers who work in prisons? What is in their training or lack of it that stands out? This isn't what they signed up for…yet they are asked to do it.3.Is it hard to identify those with mental illness at first?4. What works , and what could help make it work better?5. Could family involvement help? Do prisons request or get histories of patients?6. We often hear that during deinstitutionalization we took people out of institutions and the mirror image number people are now in jails and prisons. In “Insane,” you contend that the story is far more complicated. Please explain.7. You note that race, poverty, and mental illness overlap in the criminal justice system, but of all the gross imbalances of our current approach to criminal justice, perhaps no group has been hurt as much as people with mental illness. Why is that your conclusion?8. Why is society more willing to spend money on jails and prisons (e.g., mental health units) than regular mental health care?9. You write that about 80 percent of people with mental illness in the criminal justice system have a substance use disorder in addition to the mental illness. Have we made any progress in treating these illnesses in tandem?10. You write that 30 % of those with serious mental illness receive no treatment at all. What kinds of mental health care do we need more of?11. You note that in many states, much of the inventory of beds is reserved for forensic patients, at the expense of civilian ones, thus sending more people with mental illness to jail and prison. Do we need more inpatient care and long-term care?12. What should a better mental health care system look like?13. You write that since the changes of the 1970s, many cite the barriers to involuntary commitment as one of the reasons for the increased criminalization of mental illness. Do you also subscribe to that theory?14. Why is enrollment in mental health courts so limited, making them, as you write, unable to make a dent in the number of people with mental illness who end up in the criminal court system.Links:AlisaRoth on twitter/X - @alisa_rothWebsite: http://alisaroth.com/Mindy and her book: https://mindygreiling.com/Randye and her book: https://www.randyekaye.com/Miriam and her book: https://www.miriam-feldman.com/
Is (mental) health care a human right? Today is the second part of a two-episode series on the history of prison healthcare. In this series, we explore the extensive cross-over that exists between incarceration and mental illness, the medical and mental health services available to incarcerated people, and Supreme Court cases that shaped the way healthcare is provided to prisoners. We will also take a look at the history of solitary confinement and its impact including the history of the infamous Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia. Articles Referenced During Episode: The Philadelphia Inquirer- Incarceration: Inventing Solitary, by Samantha Melamed Federal Bureau of Prisons - Historical Information Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site - Timeline Books Insane: America's Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness, by Alisa Roth Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing, by Ted Conover Follow along to never miss a monstrous moment! New episodes are released every Monday. If you enjoyed today's episode please take a minute to rate, review and share! Instagram: @monstermedpod Ashley's Instagram: @ashandcinn Website: www.monstermedpod.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/monstermedpod/support
Is (mental) health care a human right? Today is the first part of a two-episode series on the history of prison healthcare. In this series, we explore the extensive cross-over that exists between incarceration and mental illness, the medical and mental health services available to incarcerated people, and Supreme Court cases that shaped the way healthcare is provided to prisoners. We will also take a look at the history of solitary confinement and its impact on mental health. Stay monstrous! Articles Referenced During Episode: The Philadelphia Inquirer- Incarceration: Inventing Solitary, by Samantha Melamed Federal Bureau of Prisons - Historical Information The Marshall Project- Infected, Incarcerated, and Coming to an ICU Near You?, by Joseph Neff and Beth Schwartzapfel Books Insane: America's Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness, by Alisa Roth Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing, by Ted Conover Follow along to never miss a monstrous moment! New episodes released every Monday. If you enjoyed today's episode be sure to rate, review and share! Instagram: @monstermedpod Ashley's Instagram: @ashandcinn Website: www.monstermedpod.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/monstermedpod/support
In 2021 it's difficult for the average person to imagine that someone born and raised in the United States does not know how to use technology or navigate public transportation, or could be overcome with anxiety at the thought of crossing the street. Now imagine being in a position where it's frowned upon to ask for help in those situations or even ask questions because you're expected to just KNOW. I was that person 6 years ago. For over a decade I lived in what I call a time capsule. I was eventually released from one of NJ's state prisons but to an area, where I had never lived, at an age that people expected me to act in a manner that was foreign to me, and without the support needed for my survival. I couldn't get a job because I never had a resume, I couldn't get an apartment because I had no rental, employment, or credit history, I couldn't do the many things that would prevent me from going back to the system designed for me to fail. I'm not the only neighbor you pass that has a similar reentry experience. Hiding In Plain Sight: The Neighbors You Never Hear From is an audio series that will take you on the journey of reentry through the first-hand experiences of 6 people and where they are today.Tia Ryans is an advocate against the detrimental culminations of the criminal legal system. Her areas of passion and study surround the intersectionality between environmental, social, and criminal injustices that impact disenfranchised communities. As the Founding Executive Director of Forcing Out Recidivism Through Education (F.O.R.T.E. House), she provides a healthy and stable living environment for formerly incarcerated students transitioning from incarceration through post-secondary education.Tia is also the Founding Chapter Leader of All of Us or None - Northern NJ, where she leads grassroots advocacy initiatives to support families directly impacted by the criminal legal system. As a first-generation college graduate, she holds a bachelor's degree in Political Science from Rutgers University- Newark. Her experiences include her work with Congressman Donald M. Payne, Jr. (NJ-10) to strengthen and maintain constituent relationships, collaborations with ETS for best practices surrounding justice impacted college students in the educational ecosystem, and presentations in spaces such as The AAUW about the advancements to advocacy and education for women and girls. Tia is also a speaker of the Faces of Women Imprisoned Speakers Bureau to deepen and broaden public conversation through public symposiums.To support the continued work of NJ F.O.R.T.E House and learn more about the organization, visit: njfortehouse.orgGet involved: All of us or None-Northern NJ Tia's Book RecommendationsFourth City: Essays from Prison in America, Edited by Doran Larson (2014)Just Mercy, By Bryan Stevenson (2014)Charged: The New Movement to Transform American Prosecution and End Mass Incarceration, By Emily Bazelon (2019)From Prison to Ph.D.: A Memoir of Hope, Resilience, and Second Chances, By Jason SoleCaught: The Prison State and the Lockdown of American Politics, By Marie Gottschalk (2014)A Colony in a Nation, By Chris Hayes (2017)Insane: America's Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness, By Alisa Roth (2018)American Prison: A Reporter's Undercover Journey Into the Business of Punishment, By Shane Bauer (2018)Among the Lowest of the Dead, By David Von Drehle (1995)Anatomy of Injustice, By Raymond Bonner (2012)Autobiography of an Execution, By David Dow (2010)Burning Down The House: The End of Juvenile Prison, By Nell Bernstein (2014)Convicting the Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong, By Brandon Garrett (2011)Inside Private Prisons: An American Dilemma in the Age of Mass Incarceration, By Lauren-Brooke Eisen (2017)A False Report: A True Story of Rape in AmericaBy T. Christian Miller and Ken Armstrong (2018)Prison Rape: An American Institution?, by Michael Singer (Author)Inside This Place, Not of It: Narratives from Women's Prisonsby Robin Levi (Editor), Ayelet Waldman (Goodreads Author) (Editor)Dark Alliance by Gary Webb (1998)S Street Rising by Ruben Castaneda (2014)This series is part of the Newark News, and Story Collaborative made possible with funding support from the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation and the Victoria Foundation. The Newark News and Story Collaborative is committed to elevating community-driven storytelling to fill information gaps in local and national media. The Collaborative trains community members in storytelling, media-making, and other creative art forms to share and amplify their experiences. It's laying the groundwork for a collaborative network that will address longstanding information inequities in Newark, New Jersey. For more information and hear local stories, you can go to newarkstories.com.
Today, we have the pleasure of meeting Reia Chapman, a Licensed Clinical Social Worker. She is the founder and an outpatient therapist at The Center for Family and Maternal Wellness, founder of the Social Justice Emotional Response Collective, and an inspiring writer and content creator for Decolonize Psychotherapy. She has a strong background in reproductive health rights and justice and regularly engages in public speaking and keynote engagements as well as facilitates trainings and workshops. She received her Master's degree from Savannah State University and moved back to Charlotte to work in crisis intervention community services. She found the work to be challenging due to the bureaucracy. She discovered that her clients and families were not responding well to the service because it did not center their needs. She recognized the disconnect between the policies, laws, and rules to culture, poverty, and intersections. At this point, she realized that graduate school did not prepare her to work in marginalized communities. Since then, she has found that many in the mental health profession are unaware of the background of racism that makes us complicit in the suffering of people. This awareness informs her work with Decolonize Psychotherapy. With this series, she helps address the academic and education sector as well as corporate sector with workshops based on what the need is now to retain staff of color, how to create spaces that are safe, and protocols that could help clients feel seen. "It is the work that I love to do. I love direct practice work and I think as I've evolved as a clinician, I've seen a greater need for me to contribute to the discourse and to the profession in ways that inspire and mold the next generation of Social Workers." Reia's private practice, The Center for Family and Maternal Wellness, opened in 2016 and has great racial and gender diversity, helping those with mood and anxiety disorders, perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, couples therapy, and support for Queer and Transgender populations. Her work with the Social Justice Emotional Response Collective officially solidified in 2016 after the murder of Keith Lamont Scott in Charlotte, but had it's beginnings when she was organizing emotional support efforts in Ferguson, MO after the death of Mike Brown. Reia was in Alaska during the uprising in Charlotte and kept wondering who was responding to the emotional needs of the community. "I remember looking at the news and imagining the trauma that these folx must be experiencing when they were facing huge militarized police force. I thought about what it was like to be gassed or dogs to be used on people. I thought about seeing tanks and being hosed and I thought 'what would that do to a person's psyche?" The works she does with SJERC is an act of resistance for her and an act of love and deep respect for the community. SJERC is a mental health mutual aid program which reconvened after the death of George Floyd. During this response, the Collective has added a 24/7 hotline staffed by mental health clinicians, created a website to submit appointment requests and donations, and increased visibility with lime green t-shirts. They have connected with other organizers such as Jail Support. The Collective has continued to offer professionals in the wellness space a place to donate their time to help those who are protesting as well as pro-bono services to those who need emergency emotional support. Alisa Roth's book, "Insane: America's Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness" has been influential in her work with SJERC. Reia wants to heal Charlotte because she recognizes she does not have a choice in the matter. Since childhood, she was the one who people came to for support, guidance, comfort, and love as well as her fight for others her entire life. She cannot separate herself from healing. In the Charlotte community, she is inspired by many including Kass Ottley and Kristie Puckett Williams at Jail Support as well as the content creators and writers who are documenting the story. She continues to be inspired by those who have found ways to forgive and have difficult conversations to push past their pain to educate. Find the Social Justice Emotional Response Collective on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, or call the hotline at 704-659-4997.
Voir Dire: Conversations from the Criminal Justice Policy Program at Harvard Law School
We discuss mental illness and the criminal system with Alisa Roth, author of Insane: America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness.
One of the most horrific—and least acknowledged—effects of mass incarceration is the epidemic of mental illness in our jails and prisons. Alisa Roth, journalist and author of Insane: America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness, will explain how this happened—and how we can fix it. Journalist Alisa Roth is the author of Insane: America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness, an investigation into the crisis of mental illness in the US criminal justice system. A former staff reporter at Marketplace, Roth’s work has also appeared on NPR, and in The New York Times and New York Review of Books.
Jails in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago each house more people with mental illnesses than any hospital. As many as half of all people in America's jails and prisons have a psychiatric disorder. Journalist Alisa Roth joins us to talk about her new book "Insane", an urgent exposé of the mental health crisis in our courts, jails, and prisons.
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses self-harm, prisons, justice system, suicide and poor treatment of mental illness. Get the book here It was an absolute pleasure to speak to Alisa Roth author of Insane: America’s criminal Treatment of Mental Illness. We could have talked for hours about Alisa’s book, we think … Continue reading "Interview 5 – Alisa Roth Author of Insane: America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness"
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses self-harm, prisons, justice system, suicide and poor treatment of mental illness. Get the book here It was an absolute pleasure to speak to Alisa Roth author of Insane: America’s criminal Treatment of Mental Illness. We could have talked for hours about Alisa’s book, we think … Continue reading "Interview 5 – Alisa Roth Author of Insane: America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness"
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses police shootings, self-harm, body fluids and suicide. Get our next book here If you feel suicidal call 999 immediately. *Sponsor* Happiful Magazine Thanks to the lovely people at Happiful Magazine who have sponsored Sydney to attend the Mental Health First Aid Course this July. We … Continue reading "Episode 48 – Insane America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness by Alisa Roth Pt 3"
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses police shootings, self-harm, body fluids and suicide. Get our next book here If you feel suicidal call 999 immediately. If you cannot wait for our next episodes you can get advanced access by going to Patreon. You can support us with as little as $2 … Continue reading "Episode 48 – Insane America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness by Alisa Roth Pt 3"
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses police shootings, self-harm, body fluids and suicide. Get our next book here If you feel suicidal call 999 immediately. *Sponsor* Happiful Magazine Thanks to the lovely people at Happiful Magazine who have sponsored Sydney to attend the Mental Health First Aid Course this July. We … Continue reading "Episode 48 – Insane America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness by Alisa Roth Pt 2"
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses police shootings, self-harm, body fluids and suicide. Get our next book here If you feel suicidal call 999 immediately. If you cannot wait for our next episodes you can get advanced access by going to Patreon. You can support us with as little as $2 … Continue reading "Episode 48 – Insane America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness by Alisa Roth Pt 2"
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses police shootings, self-harm, body fluids and suicide. Get our next book here If you feel suicidal call 999 immediately. *Sponsor* Happiful Magazine Thanks to the lovely people at Happiful Magazine who have sponsored Sydney to attend the Mental Health First Aid Course this July. We … Continue reading "Episode 48 – Insane America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness by Alisa Roth Pt 1"
Find out more at www.mentalhealthbookclub.com Trigger warning: this podcast discusses police shootings, self-harm, body fluids and suicide. Get our next book here If you feel suicidal call 999 immediately. If you cannot wait for our next episodes you can get advanced access by going to Patreon. You can support us with as little as $2 … Continue reading "Episode 48 – Insane America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness by Alisa Roth Pt 1"
The United States has the largest population of prisoners in the world: at present, nearly 2.2 million adults are inside correctional facilities. The incarcerated are disproportionately African-American and Latinx, and nearly half have been diagnosed with a mental illness. In her book Insane: America's Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness, journalist Alisa Roth reports on the lack of care available to these vulnerable populations, and describes the abuse and punishment that exacerbates their illnesses. This conversation between Roth and Eyal Press took place at Book Culture on April 24, 2018.
Sedaris talks about his latest book, and Alisa Roth discusses “Insane: America’s Criminal Treatment of Mental Illness.”
For many, the circus brings back fond memories of lions, tigers and other exotic animals performing incredible feats of entertainment. But in recent years, the ability of some circuses to properly care for such large beasts has come into question, and this renewed scrutiny has not been limited to the United States. Actress, animal advocate (and native New Yorker) Jorja Fox, who plays the popular character Sara Sidle on the mega-hit series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, spoke with "Pets In the City" host Diane West about Ms. Fox’s work on behalf of 25 lions and other circus animals which she, Bob Barker, and other celebrities helped fly from Bolivia to the USA through Animal Defenders International and "Operation Lion Ark." Listen to the incredible journey of the lions on this ongoing rescue-and-relocation project as well as some juicy clues about what it’s like to work on the set of CSI, the traits Ms. Fox shares with her character Sara, and Ms. Fox’s thoughts about the long-distance TV marriage between Sara and Gil Grissom (actor William Petersen). Will Grissom return to the CSI lab in Las Vegas? Tune in to see what "Sara" says! More details on this episode MP3 Podcast - Fox Saves Lions: CSI’s Jorja Fox And Other Celebrities Investigate The Scene of Criminal Treatment of Bolivian Circus Lions And Keep ‘Operation Lion Ark’ Afloat with Diane West