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Poor, distraught and desperate: Oregon man threatens suicide
on floor of state Senate
By Noah Page
10 February 2005
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The state capitol building in Salem, Oregon, was disrupted
for an hour last week when a distraught 54-year-old man, swearing
loudly and carrying a 10-inch knife, walked into the Senate chamber
and threatened to kill himself.
The incident was caught on the buildings internal video
system. Boyd A. Owens entered the Oregon Senate Chamber a few
minutes before lawmakers were to convene their 11:15 a.m. floor
session on Monday, January 31. Police said 15 people were in the
chamber and fled as Owens took a seat at the base of the Senate
presidents podium, holding a knife in one hand and a cigarette
in the other.
An Oregon lawmaker who also is a physician attempted to talk
to Owens before a trained police negotiator took over. Before
Owens surrendered peacefully an hour later, much of the building
had been overrun by officers with the Oregon State Police and
sharpshooters. As he was escorted handcuffed down the capitol
steps, Owens turned to reporters and TV cameras. Im
disabled! he screamed. I need housing! Thats
all!
Owens was taken to a hospital for a mental evaluation. Police
said that he faces charges of second-degree criminal mischief,
menacing and disorderly conduct.
The response by state lawmakers and the state media was fast
and unanimous. Much was made of the fact that elsewhere in the
building, representatives from the Oregon chapter of the National
Alliance for the Mentally Ill were visiting to lobby lawmakers.
Also, the issue raisedfor politicians and media commentators,
at leastthe need to beef up security at the state capitol.
Stemming from the first assumption, of course, is the notion
that anyone driven to do such a thing clearly is suffering from
a mental illness. Two days later, the Oregonian expressed
hope that security issues, real or illusory, would be dealt with
quickly so lawmakers could get back to the real business
in Salem, such as addressing the needs of the mentally ill, of
which the intruder was apparently a sad reminder.
The Salem Statesman-Journal, meanwhile, gently suggested
that perhaps people were too carried away with security issues
and not paying enough attention to the apparent cause of Owenss
distress.
Oregon will waste no time improving security so the states
most powerful people feel safe in the Capitol, an editorial
observed on February 2. How long before people with mental
illness get the help they need?
More information about Owens was reported in the following
week, as family members and friends spoke with the media. While
suggesting that the man was indeed troubled and had had some minor
scrapes with police, the picture thats emerged seems less
a clear-cut case of someone who is wholly irrational by virtue
of a mental illness than first reported.
Boyd lived four blocks from the capitol in a seven-story apartment
building. Interviews by the media with family revealed that after
having troubles with drugs and alcohol in the 1980s, he had found
some stability in his life. Shortly after he began attending a
local church, he suffered from an aneurysm that nearly killed
him.
Following three brain surgeries at Oregon Health Sciences University
in Portland, Boyd recovered slowly while living in a series of
care homes. Unable to work, he began to get $500 a month in Social
Security disability checks.
Boyds sister, Sonya Gaub, told reporters that her brother
applied in 2001 for a Section 8 federal housing subsidy and was
denied. Although state officials would not disclose what had disqualified
Boyd, his sisters remarks suggested that he had run into
rules prohibiting help for those with a criminal background. He
was told at the time that he could reapply in three years.
No matter how hard you try and what the circumstances,
I dont think people realize that the system will not help
former felons, she told the Statesman-Journal.
Boyd currently pays $388 for a studio apartment. On Friday,
two days before he burst into the capitol building, he visited
the Salem Housing Authority office to inquire once again about
a housing voucher. He was reportedly told that he could apply
and join a waiting list with nearly 4,000 households ahead of
him, which amounts to a two-year wait.
Friday afternoon he found out that he had to be put on
a waiting list, and he just went crazy, Gaub told Portland
TV station KATU. Others who knew Boyd expressed their surprise
by his actions. Hes a very peaceful person,
Bill Sandhu, who attended Boyds church, told reporters.
Hes never shown any sign of violence or of bad-mouthing
anybody.
Oregons media seems to have contented itself with writing
Boyd off as simply a crazy person who acted out inappropriately.
Salem, the Statesman-Journal noted lazily, seems
to have an added share of troubled people.
That isnt to say that there arent thousands of
mentally ill men and women in Oregon who are in desperate need
of helphousing, medication, and the like. They may very
well find sympathetic sound bites from state and local officials,
but less forthcoming is meaningful help. Oregon has, in recent
years, already seen a wave of cuts in programs for the mentally
ill.
More indicative of the social crisis, however, is the complete
absence from either political party or the states media
pundits of any serious, rational discussion of the real, objective
conditions that, among other things, have compelled people from
nearly 4,000 households to seek housing assistance in Salem alone.
What has raced to the top of the agenda for Oregons big
business politicians, at least for the moment, is the vital need
to shield themselves from occasional outbursts of rage by the
broader public.
See Also:
Study details economic
distress facing Oregon workers
[6 December 2004]
As Oregons economy
recovers, hundreds of thousands go hungry
[3 November 2004]
Oregon budget crisis
leads to closure of three hospitals
[30 January 2004]
On the social crisis
in Oregonand the political malaise in the US
[22 December 2003]
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