Wisconsin Mental Health Law: Crisis
Wisconsin Statute Chapter 51.15 (Emergency Detention): This state law governs when law enforcement can take someone into custody for involuntary mental health evaluation and treatment. Key criteria include: the person must be mentally ill, drug depen...
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Wisconsin Mental Health Law: Crisis
Wisconsin Statute Chapter 51.15 (Emergency Detention): This state law governs when law enforcement can take someone into custody for involuntary mental health evaluation and treatment. Key criteria include: the person must be mentally ill, drug dependent, or developmentally disabled; show a substantial probability of harm to self (e.g., recent suicide threats), harm to others (e.g., recent violent acts or threats), impaired judgment leading to injury, or inability to meet basic needs causing imminent serious harm; and the detention must be the least restrictive option. Only police (or, in a Milwaukee County pilot, certain physicians after police transport) can initiate this, and it requires approval from mental health professionals. The law aims to balance individual rights with public safety but sets a high threshold to avoid unnecessary detentions.
Related U.S. Context: While state-specific, this aligns with broader U.S. principles under the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment, as interpreted in cases like O'Connor v. Donaldson (421 U.S. 563, 1975), which holds that non-dangerous mentally ill individuals cannot be involuntarily confined without treatment. Federal laws like the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (part of 42 U.S.C. ยง 300gg-26) require insurance parity for mental health but don't directly address commitment standards.
Director: Tam Lawrence
Starring: WYAU Crew
Country: United States