Toledo man ordered back to mental hospital

2011.0106.rodney.wallace

Rodney Wallace and his mother Darlene Wallace wait for an elevator in the Lewis County Law and Justice Center after his hearing on Thursday.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Toledo resident Rodney Wallace won his freedom from a state mental hospital this summer but found himself back in court last week after the hospital review board found signs he was slipping back into his mental illness.

The farm mechanic was 37 when he was found not guilty by reason of temporary insanity of second-degree assault and felony eluding for a July 2005 incident in which he was accused of trying to run down his father and two deputies with a tractor near the family’s Toledo home. He had a diagnosis of bipolar disorder.

Under state law, the hospital could hold Wallace as long as the maximum time he would have gotten if convicted, which is 10 years, but in August his attorney persuaded a judge Wallace was stabilized and should be allowed to live with his parents, Ralland and Darlene Wallace.

Lewis County Superior Court Judge Nelson Hunt granted Wallace a release with conditions; among the requirements: that he take his medications, refrain from consuming alcohol, and meet regularly with both a community mental health professional and Western State Hospital’s community nurse.

But, Wallace was returned to the hospital in October after a meeting with the hospital’s therapist in which he described talking to his grandparents in heaven, complaining the FBI was following him and that his face was red, literally painted red, according to Senior Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher.

On Thursday, Wallace, his lawyer, his private psychologist, family and friends went before Judge Hunt in an attempt to convince him the hospital was overreacting in claiming he should remain locked up.

Meagher argued for the hospital.

“What the review board concluded was there were signs of decompensation, and that’s one of the conditions of his orders,” Meagher told the judge.

Wallace’s lawyer Zenon Olbertz suggested it was unreasonable to revoke the conditional release, especially since the hospital’s gradual recovery program means a minimum of a 13-month stay.

Olbertz said his client has followed the court’s requirements, taking his medications, seeing his therapists, and “there’s not one sentence in the record, since 2005, that he’ ever been a danger to anybody.”

He downplayed the report of delusional thinking.

“If everybody who has these kinds of thoughts were swept off the street, we wouldn’t have enough places to put them,” Olbertz said.

Hunt said the present situation was “almost predicted” before Wallace was allowed to return to the family farm in August. He revoked Wallace’s conditional release.

“I give a great deal of deference to Western State Hospital,” Hunt said. “I’m unwilling to subject the community to that risk.”

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Read “Toledo man released from Western State Hospital” from Thursday Aug. 19, 2010 here

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2 Responses to “Toledo man ordered back to mental hospital”

  1. Kelly Cash says:

    Rodney is My Grandma’s nephew. It makes him my GREAT Cousin but I call him Cousin Rodney. Rodney isn’t the only one with Bipolar. I also have Bipolar and I was rooting for Rodney and the tractor.

    Let’s be real. Who doesn’t wish they had the gumption of Rodney Wallace. Cousin Rodney is my personal Hero.

  2. Kory D Alexander says:

    The judgement made by the courts to reinstate Rodney Wallace was unnecessary and unfair. I am very close to the Wallace family and am a nephew to Rodneys brother Brian. I have lived and worked on the farm off and on since I was about 10 years old and was living just down the road the day Rodney was first arrested. At the time I did not care for him let alone be around him because of the way he was with the way he was living his life at the time.

    When he was released from the hospital last August I had the same opinion of who he was before, until, I had the chance to get to know him again. I was with him basically everyday afterwards and never felt in danger one time. I was what he called his “Hired Hand” and helped him learn to use a computer and the internet. He never asked or even considered consuming alcohol or hurting anybody. He had his moments as was stated in the article about seeing or thinking things that were as most would say “crazy”. But as I was saying Rodney is not a bad person and is certainly not “dangerous” or “a threat to society”

    There is no reason rapists, child molesters, murderers etc. should be set free to live their lives among people. And to make a judgment and sentence a person who has never harmed a human before return to a hospital because of a few harmless “looney” statements is inhumane and unfair.

    Im quite sure if every person who ever made a crazy gesture or saying were sent to the hospital, There would be nobody left outside of it.