Greenwich Time (Sunday)

Review board upholds transfer of woman who nearly killed Conn. cop

- By Christine Dempsey Christine Dempsey may be reached at Christine.Dempsey@hearstmedi­act.com.

MIDDLETOWN — The state Psychiatri­c Security Review Board on Friday voted unanimousl­y to uphold a decision to transfer a woman who stabbed a Hartford cop in the neck in 2018 from maximum-security Whiting Forensic Hospital to a less-secure setting.

Chevoughn Augustin will remain at the less-restrictiv­e Dutcher unit, but with contingenc­ies, according to Vanessa Cardella, the board’s executive director.

Augustin’s treatment team must notify the board if she receives privileges, Cardella said, and is required to immediatel­y alert the board if she shows symptoms of psychosis or refuses to take her medicine.

The 5-0 vote came after a closed session and a public hearing during which medical staff from Whiting explained that Augustin, in their assessment, has been stable and ready for the transfer.

Cardella said she received an “unpreceden­ted number of emails asking for Augustin to be returned to Whiting. During the hearing, board members, a prosecutor and public defender asked pointed questions of the medical profession­als and former Hartford Police Officer Jill Kidik harshly criticized the decision to transfer her attacker.

“I lost everything because of her,” Kidik said, describing how she was injured physically and emotionall­y.

Eight doctors, psychologi­sts and other profession­als said Augustin has improved since the attack in May 2018, when she scored a 5 — the most acute level of mental illness — on a test. They said her thought process was “disorganiz­ed,” and she refused to take her medicine.

Dr. Alexander Westphal said Augustin was “withdrawn,” and “was creating all sorts of trouble with anyone who crossed paths with her.” She was particular­ly difficult when dealing with authority figures, he said. He said she in the past suffered some kind of trauma involving police.

Doctors adjusted her medication, and she improved, becoming “less guarded,” he said.

Last spring, Augustin was described by staff as “bright” and “engaging in treatment,” Westphal said. In fact, when a fellow patient punched her in the face in July, she handled it well, Westphal said. Instead of hitting the person back, she reported it to staff.

But later that week, she reported hearing a male voice singing in the middle of the night and asked for more medication, he said. There were no incidents to report since then, he said.

“So, for the last six months, there is nothing to report,” Westphal said. Dutcher is appropriat­e for her, he said, and “it is

where she should be.”

However, board member Mark Kirschner questioned how well Augustin is if she reported auditory hallucinat­ions in July.

“To me, that would indicate that she, psychiatri­cally, would not be stable,” Kirschner said.

Augustin was moved under a new law that took effect in the fall that allows patients to be transferre­d without a review board hearing. In the past, a hearing before the Psychiatri­c Security Review Board was required before any decisions were made to transfer a patient to a less-secure setting. But part of a new law designed to improve conditions at Whiting for patients and staff allows a committee of medical and other profession­als to make the call.

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Chevoughn Augustin attends her hearing remotely before the Psychiatri­c Security Review Board at Connecticu­t Valley Hospital in Middletown on Friday.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Chevoughn Augustin attends her hearing remotely before the Psychiatri­c Security Review Board at Connecticu­t Valley Hospital in Middletown on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States