Psychiatrists and province liable for ‘inhumane’ patient abuse
Two psychiatrists have been found liable for the harm they caused inmates at a maximum security mental-health facility, who said the mistreatment they endured amounted to torture.
In his decision, Ontario Superior Court Justice Ed Morgan sided with 28 former patients of Oak Ridge in Penetanguishene, Ont., in their 20-year-old action against the doctors and Ontario government.
“Degradation of the patient or an undermining of their personal dignity and sense of selfworth was not a side effect of the … programs,” Morgan ruled. “It was part of the design.”
At issue were three programs instituted by doctors Elliott Barker and Gary Maier in the Oak Ridge “social therapy unit.” Maier himself had described the programs as the “greatest experiments in psychiatry.”
For their part, the plaintiffs said they became victims of “inhumane treatment and psychological and physical abuse.”
Among other things, court heard how the men were forced to take mind-altering drugs such as LSD, forcibly restrained or isolated, and were confined nude and handcuffed to other men in the “capsule” — a tiny windowless, soundproof room that was always lit and had one open toilet. They were fed through straws in the walls.
The patients were often enlisted to keep others in line, deprived of sleep, or held for long periods in painful stress positions described as “positional torture.”
The men committed to the facility between 1966 and 1983 were mostly teenagers or in their early 20s and almost all came from abusive and badly broken homes. One, however, had been a child prodigy on the piano and had performed at the Royal Alexander theatre but began drinking and using drugs in his teens.
One man, Danny Joanisse, who died in his mid-60s after testifying last year, was in the facility as a small 14-year old boy. He recalled spending days in the “capsule” cuffed to a convicted pedophile murderer. Joanisse, who had been physically and sexually abused at the St. John’s Training School, was sent to Oak Ridge after multiple suicide attempts.
Barker referred to his wards as “throwaway people” and once wrote his programs suggested the “weekend pastimes of
Storm Troopers.”
The almost 10-week trial heard from all the plaintiffs, either directly or through statements. Barker was unable to testify for health reasons, but left behind extensive notes and writings.
In his decision, Morgan found neither psychiatrist ensured patients had provided informed and voluntary consent. Nor should they have allowed other patients to act on their behalf in keeping fellow inmates in line, he said.
“Both doctors disregarded the ethical obligations that were on them to treat the patients in a way that did not cause them further harm,” Morgan said.