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Office of the Mental
Health Advocate

104 Marietta St.
Suite 200
Atlanta, GA 30303
(404) 232-8900
(800) 676-4432
Fax: (404) 651-5706

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Mental Health Advocate
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Macon Judicial Circuit Unveils Its New Mental Health Court

Justice Leah Ward Sears and Judge Phil Brown
Georgia Supreme Court Justice Leah Ward Sears (left) and Judge Phil Brown, Bibb County Superior Court

At a ceremony April 4, 2007 Justice Leah Ward Sears stamped her seal of approval on the new initiative by Macon Judicial Circuit to have an alternative for their mentally ill population that find themselves in the Criminal Justice system. Judge Phil Brown will preside over the Mental Health Court that began April 18, 2007. Establishing a Mental Health Court was a goal of Circuit Public Defender, Lee Robinson. He and his office were instrumental in developing the Court along with Judge Brown, Sheriff Jerry Modena, Frank Fields, Rivers Edge Community Service board and many other agencies in the county and state.

Lee Robinson said ' The Office of Mental Health Advocate was instrumental in moving this project ahead by coordinating the visits to the existing mental health courts and providing timely information.
Macon Circuit Public
Defender Lee Robinson
The target population of this program is defendants arrested with lower level felonies as well as misdemeanor cases. The goal of the program is to address public safety while providing treatment to individuals with mental health issues that are involved with the criminal justice system. Each individual will have a "team" assigned to their case that will consist of someone from the District Attorney's office, the Circuit Public Defender's office, the Probation Department, Bibb County office of the Sheriff, River Edge, Bibb County Department of Family and Children Services (DFCS), Macon Housing Authority and the Program Coordinator.

Together these agencies aspire to create an environment that will minimize the cost of incarceration, reduce recidivism and encourage a productive alternative for those with mental health issues that find themselves in the criminal justice system.

Judge Phil Brown
Judge Phil Brown will preside over the new mental
health court.

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Our Mission
The Office of the Mental Health Advocate (OMHA) was created by statute in 1996 to provide services to attorneys representing criminal defendants with mental health challenges. OMHA monitors cases in Georgia involving pleas of Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) and it directly represents a limited number of insanity acquittees. We provide services state-wide as a way of assisting attorneys, the hospitals, and the courts in criminal cases involving mentally ill defendants.

Announcements and Articles
Wednesday, January 9, 2008 11:40 AM

Check here frequently for OMHA news and articles about mental health issues in the criminal justice system.

February 7 Seminar: "Psychotic Illness, Cognition & Functional Outcomes"
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Legislative Update: Changes in 17-7-130 Incompetent to Stand Trial (IST)
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The Office of the Mental Health Advocate Welcomes its 2007 Summer Interns
Our office has added four interns to its staff for the summer. The interns are: Amber L. Bagley, Emory Law School, 3L; Justin Holcombe, Georgia State University College of Law, 2L; Sheena Bosket, Georgia State University College of Law, 2L; and Santisa Hambrick, Atlanta Technical College, sophomore. Our office welcomes the extra help and the energy that this group of interns brings to defending the mentally challenged.
Amber L. Bagley
Amber L. Bagley
Sheena Boskett
Sheena Bosket
Santisa Hambrick
Santisa Hambrick
Justin Holcombe
Justin Holcombe
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Legislative Update - Changes in 17-7-130 Incompetent to Stand Trial (IST)
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Macon Gets New Mental Health Court
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Yvonne Sherrill Receives the Department of Human Resources Forensic Services’ 1st Annual Debra Blum Award
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Women at Risk: Neonaticide, Infanticide and Filicide
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Clarifying the Process for Defendants Found Guilty but Mentally Ill or Guilty but Mentally Retarded
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Judge Winston P. Bethel Wins Debra J Blum Award
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Aspergers' Syndrome - The Odd, Eccentric, Socially Impaired Have Help
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Kenneth Shepherd Gets His
Day in Court

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Shock Therapy: It's Not a
Thing of the Past

Psychiatric Medications 101 has been updated.

A Victory for Competency in Simms Case
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The Governor's Pilot Mental Health Diversion Program: The HELP Program, A Hall County Inititative

Dealing with a Schizophrenic Client

The Standard of Review for Competency Challenged

Honoring Debbie Blum, a Mental Health Pioneer

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