WASHINGTON March 3
Missouri dentist Charles Sell sees imaginary leopards, believes
the FBI is trying to kill him and wants to go into combat.
The Supreme Court will be considering his case Monday, bringing
into question whether the 53-year-old can be forced to take
anti-psychotic drugs to make him well enough to stand trial on
insurance fraud charges.
His case asks the high court to balance the government's interest
in punishing nonviolent crime with a person's constitutional right
to control his or her body.
Sell's case raises questions that could apply more broadly to,
for example, government programs requiring vaccinations against
anthrax or school mandates that children with hyperactivity or
attention deficit disorder take drugs to remain in class.
The justices were hearing arguments Monday in a follow-up to a
1992 court ruling that defendants can be forced to take drugs only
if it is medically appropriate.
No one disputes that Sell, of suburban St. Louis, is mentally ill
and too unstable to stand trial. There is disagreement over whether
medicines will help him, and whether he is dangerous. He currently
resides in a psychiatric unit.
The Bush administration argues that hundreds of federal
defendants a year are medicated, and that most become competent to
stand trial. Most take the drugs willingly. In a recent 12-month
period, 59 people were medicated against their wishes and about
three-fourths were restored to competency, the administration told
the court.
Sell and his wife are accused of submitting bogus claims to
Medicaid and private insurance companies for dental services. Sell
was later charged with conspiring and attempting to kill a witness a
former worker in his office and the FBI agent who arrested him.
He has spent more than four years in a prison hospital as his
lawyers fought over his drugging, more jail time than he would
receive if convicted of the fraud crimes. He has been diagnosed with
a delusional disorder.
Some were surprised when the Supreme Court announced last fall it
would hear Sell's case. The justices refused to take up the subject
in 2001 in the appeal of Russell Eugene Weston, a schizophrenic
charged with killing two U.S. Capitol police officers in 1998.
The court signaled Friday that there may be problems with the
Sell case. It asked both sides to prepare arguments about whether
the case was properly appealed.
The case has attracted the attention of medical organizations and
civil rights groups.
Peter Joy, a professor at Washington University School of Law who
filed a brief on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union, said
the powerful drugs Sell would be given can cause serious side
effects and potentially death.
"It shocks my conscience to think we might risk putting someone
to death prior to trying them on nonviolent charges," he said.
Kent Scheidegger, legal director of the Criminal Justice Legal
Foundation, said there's an interest to victims and society in
putting defendants on trial. "The criminal justice system makes all
kinds of intrusion on people's privacy. It locks people up, searches
their houses, searches their bodies," he said.
Mark N. Light, one of Sell's lawyers, said the case will resolve
"whether American citizens have a fundamental right to avoid being
drugged against their will simply because they've been charged with
a crime."
The case is Sell v. U.S., 02-5664.
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