Jon Crispin – Willard Suitcases

Here is the link to Jon Crispin’s beautiful new website, Willard Suitcases.

Jon Crispin Suitcase 6 - http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin Suitcase 6 – http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin Suitcase 2 - http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin Suitcase 2 – http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

The Changing Face of What is Normal – Jon Crispin – Exploratorium

Congratulations, Jon Crispin! This wonderful exhibit of Jon’s photography of former patient suitcases found in the attic of Willard State Hospital will be displayed at the Exploratorium in San Francisco beginning April 17, 2013.
(Please click on the RED links).

Book Photo 5.20.2013 by Jon Crispin

Book Photo 5.20.2013 by Jon Crispin

I am very proud that The Exploratorium is selling my book! Thank you!

The Changing Face Of What Is Normal, The Exploratorium.

The Changing Face of What is Normal.

Slate.com-Jon Crispin-Suitcases From The Willard Asylum.

NPR Interview with Jon Crispin.

COLLECTORS WEEKLY -Abandoned Suitcases Reveal Private Lives Of Insane Asylum Patients.

My Story by L.S. Stuhler – July 23, 2012

Featured

I include here my story about trying to obtain my great-grandmother’s medical records and photographs from the Willard State Hospital, along with asking for the release to the public of former patient names; dates of birth and death; and location of graves, in order that these forgotten people, of which there are thousands, may be honored and remembered with dignity. It all began on February 24, 2001, when I found my great-grandmother’s obituary: According to the “PennYan Democrat” newspaper dated August 17, 1928: “PUTNAM, At the State Hospital in Willard, Monday, August 13, 1928, Mrs. Margaret Putnam, aged 76 years. She is survived by one son, Jarvis Putnam, of PennYan. The funeral was held from the Thayer Funeral Home Wednesday afternoon, Rev. W.A. Hendricks officiating. Burial in Lake View cemetery.” 

It took a long time for me to figure out where I should be looking in order to obtain information about my great-grandmother. In 2001, I was unable to find anything on the internet pertaining to this issue which is the main reason I created this blog (July 10, 2011) and wrote the book The Inmates of Willard 1870 to 1900, A Genealogy Resource (December 17, 2011). In 2007, I came across an article about a new book written by Darby Penney, MLS, and Peter Stastney, M.D., entitled The Lives They Left Behind Suitcases From A State Hospital Attic. Wondering if my great-grandmother’s suitcase was among the 400 discovered in an attic of the Willard State Hospital, I contacted Ms. Penney. Unfortunately, it was not among the surviving suitcases. Ms. Penney’s book revealed the practice of burying “mental patients” in anonymous graves. I must admit that I had never heard of this practice before and thought it was extremely cruel. What amazed me most was that no one (that I knew of) had ever tried to rectify this sad, dehumanizing situation. What needs to be acknowledged is none of these well documented facts about the thousands of people buried in anonymous graves at Willard, and all former NYS Hospitals and Custodial Institutions, would ever have come to light without the tireless efforts of Ms. Penney, Dr. Stastney, and Mr. Craig Williams, Curator of History at the New York State Museum at Albany. I also need to thank Laurel Lemke, from the Grave Concerns Association, for sending me the law that she helped to pass in the State of Washington in 2004. Without her help in emailing me the bill, I never would have gotten the attention of Kate Munzinger, Senator Joseph Robach’s Chief of Staff. I met with Ms. Munzinger on August 22, 2011. Senator Robach introduced the bill to the New York State Senate in March 2012.

The following response letters, beginning in early 2008, are from everyone that I have contacted over the years. I have not included emails. Unless a modification is made to the present HIPAA Law and New York State Mental Hygiene Laws (See New HIPAA Update and S2514-2013), I and so many others like me, who want to know why our ancestor was committed to a state hospital, will never know the answer. My first response letter is dated April 16, 2008, in response to the original paperwork that my physician and I had sent in early September of 2007 (seven month wait). On August 13, 2008, I was denied a copy of my great-grandmother’s medical records and photographs from the Greater Binghamton Health Center. This three sentence response letter is the explanation given to me after waiting four months, taking the time and effort to speak with them on the phone, obtaining and filling out their required paper work with the help of my physician, and sending in the forms.

1- GBHC 04.16.2008

1- GBHC 04.16.2008

2 - GBHC 08.13.2008

2 – GBHC 08.13.2008

Besides writing a letter to former New York State Governor Patterson and present Governor Cuomo, both U.S. Senators from New York: Schumer and Gillibrand, State Senators, Congressmen, The Department of Correctional Services, The Commission on Quality of Care and Advocacy for Persons with Disabilities, The Office of Mental Health Counsel, and the State of New York Department of State Committee on Open Government (FOIL), I also wrote a letter to the doctor in charge of the Office of Mental Health Institutional Review Board asking permission to view, record, and publish the burial ledgers – names; dates of birth and death; and location of graves) located and stored at the NYS Archives. After waiting seven months for a response, I was told in an official letter, that my proposed study was not approved due to concerns about violating patient confidentiality. I was also told that I could take the New York State Office of Mental Health to court in order to get the names of former patients and the medical records of my great-grandmother, but seriously, who has the time and the money to go through all of that? Privacy ends at death but apparently patient confidentiality lasts forever.

I went through proper channels to obtain Maggie’s medical records and photographs. I filled out the paperwork, had my doctor and a witness sign the paperwork, and my doctor sent it in. I waited four months for a response and finally my doctor received a letter. I asked for the medical records and any photographs of my great-grandmother. When I received the response from the Greater Binghamton Health Center in August 2008, it stated the staff was unable to locate the requested file. Had I received my great-grandmother’s medical records, I would have been satisfied. Besides being genuinely interested in learning more about Willard, I created this blog for family genealogists like me, frustrated trying to find out if and when their ancestor was a Willard inmate, receiving the runaround obtaining their ancestor’s medical records and photos, and determining whether their ancestor is buried in the Willard Cemetery. The final answer came from the Commissioner of the NYS Office of Mental Health in responding to my inquiry by e-mail on October 25, 2010, which basically stated that publicly identifying former patients may be offensive to some families because of the stigma and repercussions that may follow, for example, in some small towns. I must say that I took offense to his statement because I live in a small town. What exactly was he trying to imply? It appears that we have not moved any further in our tolerance or understanding of people with problems and of people who live in small towns. I must say that my favorite letter is from the Commissioner, dated June 3, 2011, in which he reminds me “that the penalties for violations are very stiff – civil penalties under federal law can carry up to $10,000 per violation.”

Willard’s inmates who in life were incarcerated, forgotten, warehoused, and controlled by the state are once again controlled and intentionally forgotten in death by New York State, the New York State Office of Mental Health, or both. Perhaps they are interpreting the scope of the HIPAA Law incorrectly. The only logical assumption is the protection provided by these laws is not for long dead souls since U.S. Federal Censuses already reveal many of their names; it is for the protection of the descendants.

The responses from the Senators are interesting because they state that there is nothing they can do about the situation at Willard. They mention nothing about modifying the HIPAA Law which was one of the questions that I asked them to respond to. My understanding is that they are the only ones who can change or modify this federal law in order that descendants or anyone for that matter, would be allowed to have a copy of these historical medical records. When you’re dead, you’re dead. Who cares if someone looks at 80 year old medical records? The following letters were received by me from Senator Charles E. Schumer, dated January 9, 2012; and from Senator Kirsten E. Gillibrand, dated February 21, 2012. Perhaps this whole ridiculous situation of trying to uncover the identities and opening medical records of people who have been dead for one hundred years lies with the unique interpretation of the federal HIPAA Law by each individual state office of mental health.

Response Letter Senator Schumer 1.9.2012

Response Letter Senator Schumer 1.9.2012

Response Letter Senator Gillibrand 2.21.2012

Response Letter Senator Gillibrand 2.21.2012

14 - OMH 06.03.2011

14 – OMH 06.03.2011

13 - GBHC 09.07.2010

13 – GBHC 09.07.2010

11 - FOIL 06.04.2010-1

11 – FOIL 06.04.2010-1

12 - FOIL 06.04.2010-2

12 – FOIL 06.04.2010-2

10 - Correctional Services 01.15.2010

10 – Correctional Services 01.15.2010

7 - FOIL 12.10.2009-1

7 – FOIL 12.10.2009-1

8 - FOIL 12.10.2009-2

8 – FOIL 12.10.2009-2

9 - FOIL 12.10.2009-3

9 – FOIL 12.10.2009-3

5 - FOIL 09.25.2009-1

5 – FOIL 09.25.2009-1

6 - FOIL 09.25.2009-2

6 – FOIL 09.25.2009-2

4 - OMH Counsel 09.08.2009

4 – OMH Counsel 09.08.2009

3 - Quality Care Advocacy 09.01.2009

3 – Quality Care Advocacy 09.01.2009

Willard Suitcases – Darby Penney – Photos by Jon Crispin

Jon Crispin Suitcase 2 - http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin Suitcase 2 – http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Like so many others who have discovered that an ancestor was an inmate at Willard, I read the book The Lives They Left Behind Suitcases From A State Hospital Attic by Darby Penney and Peter Stastny in order to learn what life was like living inside the asylum. I contacted Ms. Penney to ask if my great-grandmother’s suitcase was found in the attic. It wasn’t. The authors were given permission to research the medical records of twelve patients and were allowed to use patient photographs in the book using factitious names. Since I am a descendent of a patient, I assumed that I would be able to receive a copy of my great-grandmother’s medical records and photographs. I was wrong. I learned that I have no right to this information unless my primary care physician needs the health records to diagnose or treat a condition. This explanation was given to me in a letter by the Commissioner of the New York State Office of Mental Health. It makes no sense to me considering that my great-grandmother has been dead for eighty-four years. I wonder if a diagnosis that was made eighty-four years ago would even be relevant today. My point is this: I want to know what happened to my great-grandmother. I want to learn her diagnosis and read about her experiences in a state hospital.

Jon Crispin Suitcase 6 - http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin Suitcase 6 – http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Ms. Penney is a national leader in the human rights movement for people with psychiatric disabilities. In an email I asked her, “When did the state hospitals go bad?” Her reply was, “It never went bad. Western society’s methods of dealing with people in mental and emotional distress have always been based on punishment and segregation. Anyone who is locked up against their will and kept in isolation is being treated poorly, to my mind.” Ms. Penney and the NYS Archives have the list of the former suitcase owners. Even though it is not a medical record it cannot be released to the public because it would identify former patients. You may contact Ms. Penney to inquire about your ancestor’s suitcase at: community@capital.net. For more information visit The Lives They Left Behind Suitcases From A State Hospital Attic Website. 

Jon Crispin Suitcase 10 - http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin Suitcase 10 – http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Willard Asylum Cemetery (Veterans Names) Military Section, Seneca County, NY:
http://www.newyorkroots.org/ontario/cems/SenecaCo/Willardceme.htm

Jon Crispin Suitcase 13 - http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin Suitcase 13 – http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/

Jon Crispin’s Notebook – Willard Suitcases:
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/03/18/willard-asylum-suitcase/

http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/07/24/willard-asylum-suitcase-2/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/10/04/willard-suitcase-3/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/10/07/willard-suitcase-4/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/10/16/willard-suitcase-5/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/10/23/willard-suitcase-6/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/10/31/willard-suitcase-7/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/11/11/willard-suitcase-8/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/12/05/willard-suitcase-9/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2011/12/27/willard-suitcase-10/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2012/01/13/willard-suitcase-11/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2012/02/06/willard-suitcase-12/
http://joncrispin.wordpress.com/2012/03/03/willard-suitcase-13/