Elusive Killer Back in Mental Hospital
Recent Escape Apparently Triggered When Judge Rejected Killer's Request to Be Released from Institution for Criminally Insane
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This image provided by the Spokane County Sheriff's Office shows 57-year-old Phillip Arnold Paul. He was recaptured Sunday, Sept. 20, 2009 after slipping away from staff during a field trip to a county fair Friday. (AP Photo/Spokane County Sheriff)
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In this undated photo released by the Klickitat County Sheriff Office, Phillip Arnold Paul is searched by authorities after his arrest, in Washington. (AP Photo/Klickitat County Sheriff)
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Paul, 47, spent three days on the run before he was captured Sunday afternoon near Goldendale. Monday he was returned to Eastern State Hospital near Spokane.
"He's locked down in a very secure area of the hospital under constant supervision," said Susan Dreyfus, head of the state Department of Social and Health Services.
That was not the case Thursday, when Paul disappeared into the crowd at the Spokane County Interstate Fair during a trip with 30 fellow patients. Authorities say it appeared he meticulously planned his escape.
When captured, he was carrying a sleeping bag and a backpack with food, clothing and many of his personal items from Eastern State. Paul, an amateur musician who posts songs on My Space, was also carrying a guitar. Ominously, a hand scythe protruded from the pack when he was captured.
Spokane County Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich said Paul conned a friend into giving him a ride from Spokane to Goldendale, about 180 miles southwest, near the Oregon border. The friend believed Paul had been legally released. When the friend saw news reports of the escape, he contacted authorites and led them to the point where he had dropped off Paul.
The escape was apparently triggered when Paul's request to move from the mental hospital to a residential facility in downtown Spokane was rejected by a judge earlier this month. The judge found that Paul represented "a threat to public safety."
Paul had petitioned and won conditional release to the downtown facility, called The Carlyle, twice in the past, fathering a child during one of his releases. His most recent release ended in January after his mental condition reportedly deteriorated.
Many are wondering why Paul would ever be released from incarceration.
Diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic, he was committed for the 1987 strangling and slashing of 78-year-old Ruth Mottley in Sunnyside. Paul, 25 at the time, snapped Mottley's neck and slashed her throat twice. He then doused her body with gasoline and buried her in her own flower garden. Paul told authorities that voices in his head told him Mottley was a witch who was casting spells on him.
Mottley was a retired educator who had founded the town's historical society and appeared on a list of Washington's 100 most influential women.
Because Paul was found not guilty by reason of insanity, he is not serving a criminal sentence, Dreyfus said. Under state law, the patient can petition for conditional release if they can convince a judge they are mentally healthy.
Dreyfus said one result of this incident is that the state Legislature may be asked to change the law so that criminals who are judged to be insane would be sent to prison if they are deemed cured.
Eastern patients have taken outings into the community for years, and hospital officials say they can be a useful tool in treatment. All such trips are on hold as the state examines its practices in light of the escape. The state Department of Social and Health Services has promised a security review will be completed within 15 days.
The union representing some hospital workers has said they were surprised Paul was approved to attend the fair because they consider him dangerous.
Knezovich plans to ask the state Legislature to ban field trips for the criminally insane. He also plans to bill the state for helicopter flight time and overtime for about 10 deputies.
Paul previously escaped from the mental hospital in 1990. He was captured nearby, and while being booked into the Spokane County Jail, he attacked and severely injured a deputy.
On his My Space page, Paul talks about his schizophrenia and the medications he takes. Identifying his band as Philly Willy and the Hillbillies, he posted songs that called Eastern State the "nut hut," the "castle on the hill," and a "palace of the pill."
On the site, Paul referred to the killing of Mottley.
"A four second mistake took Phil on a path no one could have imagined. A person lay dead at his feet."
© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- I think the staff who let the lunatic out should be sent to an insane asylum.
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- Periodically, criminally insane individuals may get the opportunity to go before a board and try to get released. They have to prove they aren't 'insane' anymore, and won't hurt anyone again. The doctors tend to make med changes prior to the evaluation.
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- The State of Washingtons Gov came out and said she is Embarrassed, As she should be. Last year it was child molesters living under freeways overpasses that embarrassed her now this! I am really tired of this state allowing people to be either released or out on "Field Trips" all the while ignoring the public's safety! Last year Child Molesters, this year the Criminally Insane, who's next Gary Ridgeway (Green River Killer)? I wouldn't doubt it if it will save a little money on the Budget since our state thinks they should spend money like drunken sailors and then wonder why we are broke!!
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- Maybe we can arrange a hook-up with him and that Callie girl in Florida that killed her daughter last year.
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- I agree that if a criminally insane person miraculously is healed, they should face jail time if their crime calls for it. I would highly suspect any miraculous healing from a criminally insane person, seems too selfish and suspiciously convenient.
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- Why are these public officials that are supposed to keep us safe taking insane killers to a fair? There's got to be different therapy than taking them to a fair and unleashing them on the public.
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- No big deal it turns out. The state of Oregon had released him (kinda) twice already. I can't wait until government officials like the ones running Oregon's mental health facilities are also running our healthcare.
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- He was in a Washington State Facility and it is a big deal since DSHS continues to make these types of mistakes with not only this guy but also child molesters!




