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Rael
10-04-2011, 09:39 AM
DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) – Blake Wimberly lives in the dark, gripped by paranoia.

The 28-year-old hides inside his small Dallas apartment because of fear that police will arrest him wherever he goes.

“I see a cop right there, so that tells me that I should not be going outside not for nothing.”

Wimberly is both autistic and schizophrenic, so he struggles with self-control.

Despite his condition, Blake has progressed enough to live on his own. But his mother, Lori Lux, says a trip to a grocery store started a downward spiral. “I see a man who has shut down,” she said.

The incident happened on April 28 at a Whole Foods store on Park Lane.

Police reports say Blake was ‘acting odd,’ leading to customer complaints.

Officers were called, and Blake was told to get out of an unauthorized area or be arrested. His response to officers was: “No, I have to call my mom.”

That refusal led to Wimberly’s arrest for criminal trespassing even though he wore a medical alert bracelet and told officers about his condition.

“I told them I had autism and he told me basically I was a liar.”

“I asked them repeatedly, was he violent? Did he ever threaten? No, they all told me no he was just odd,” Lux said.

She says she was in the shower when police called her that morning, but no one answered when she called back.

It was more than 12 hours later when she was able to bring Blake home from jail. “I was mistreated in jail,” Blake said.

“They have just totally turned our lives upside down for no reason,” added Lux.

In a statement, Whole Foods defended the store’s actions, saying Blake was quote, “Running up and down the aisles and repeatedly going into areas of the store that are employee-only.”

A spokesperson says Dallas police officers made the decision alone to take Blake to jail. Department officials did not return our calls for comment.

Since the arrest, Blake relies on his mother for trips to grocery stores, but still has a compulsion to visit them.

But the experience has made him fearful and reclusive. “I miss being welcome into places.”

In criminal trespassing cases, DPD officers have the discretion to either issue a citation or make an arrest. Blake’s family says they are planning to file a lawsuit over what happened.

http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2011/10/03/autistic-mans-acting-odd-lands-him-in-jail/

oyarde
10-04-2011, 10:27 AM
Uh oh , most of you better not leave home today :)

Icymudpuppy
10-04-2011, 10:49 AM
This is a tough call.

He violated the rules of a private property. The private property owner asked him to leave, and he refused. Police were called in to do what should be their job, help private property owners protect their private property. The police were rougher than they had to be, but being medically disabled is no excuse to force yourself on private property owners.

Endgame
10-04-2011, 10:52 AM
The relevant parts.




Wimberly is both autistic and schizophrenic, so he struggles with self-control

Despite his condition, Blake has progressed enough to live on his own. But his mother, Lori Lux, says a trip to a grocery store started a downward spiral. “I see a man who has shut down,” she said...

Officers were called, and Blake was told to get out of an unauthorized area or be arrested. His response to officers was: “No, I have to call my mom.”
[B]

In a statement, Whole Foods defended the store’s actions, saying Blake was quote, “Running up and down the aisles and repeatedly going into areas of the store that are employee-only.”



It really sounds to me like this guy shouldn't be out on his own. Schizophrenia is debilitating without huge doses of soul-destroying medicine and autism is even harder to treat. These two things don't exactly lend themselves to being able to function civilly. He was being a nuisance in a private establishment, which just happens to be owned by one my favorite libertarian entrepreneurs.

oyarde
10-04-2011, 10:53 AM
Yeah , but it should be an easy call to determine he was off a bit . He wants to call his Mom ? I would let him and drop him at the house .....

oyarde
10-04-2011, 10:54 AM
Also , his family are asses if they file a lawsuit ...

Endgame
10-04-2011, 10:54 AM
Uh oh , most of you better not leave home today :)

Ain't that the truth.

Sean
10-04-2011, 11:14 AM
My nephew has autism and I have taught kids with autism so I have experience dealing with it. The store had the right to call police and police had the right to arrest. There are so many crazy people out there now and people do not want to deal with them because it is constant. I remember my friend working at Ralph's for like 5 dollars an hour and the manager once wanted him to go outside and confront some crazy that was reported to have a gun. In the past this guy would have to have family members take care of him and accompany him to public places. Now they rely on strangers to handle this guy correctly.

I have a problem with the police state. My one criticism of the police here is they could have ticketed him and escorted him off the property. Also they shouldn't have put him in a cell with other people if possible.

The Goat
10-04-2011, 11:39 AM
Guys, its pretty simple. when you confront a person in this condition you help them. these cops didn't want to help him. they threw him in jail. Whole foods did the right thing the cops didn't. the cops could have easily took him to his mom. I don't know how people around the country treat these people, but here in upstate SC we give them jobs and help them contribute to society. Ive worked at 2 places with people that are alot like this man. they were the hardest workers Ive ever had the privilege to work with. their quarks might get on your nerves a bit, but I consider it a part of life that most want to ignore.

Watch the movie "Radio" and you'll know what I'm talking about.

The Goat
10-04-2011, 12:13 PM
watch a good bit of the video, research her, you WILL be amazed.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46ycu3JFRrA


http://www.ted.com/talks/temple_grandin_the_world_needs_all_kinds_of_minds.

Anti Federalist
10-04-2011, 12:18 PM
“I see a cop right there, so that tells me that I should not be going outside not for nothing.”

In the Empire of Insanity, the insane man is sane.

libertyjam
10-04-2011, 12:27 PM
Time to re-watch the movie "King of Hearts"

PaulConventionWV
10-04-2011, 01:22 PM
Uh oh , most of you better not leave home today :)

Right, because we're all autistic paranoid schizophrenics.

Oh, hey, my sister has autism, and I have an aunt who has been struggling with schizophrenia most of her life. Does that make me a bad person?