Paine v. Cason, No. 10-1487 (7th Cir. 2012)
Annotate this CaseEilman, a college student, was arrested outside an airport after behaving so badly that agents had called police. Eilman had developed bipolar disorder following an auto accident the previous year. She had not taken her medication and did not tell the police about her mental-health condition. By phone, her mother and stepfather told officers about her disorder. They did not believe the stepfather and the officer who talked to her mother did not share the information. Officers thought that Eilman was being difficult or was on drugs. In custody, Eilman alternated between calm and manic. Officers released her into a neighborhood she did not know, near a public-housing project with an exceptionally high crime rate without returning her cell phone. She was raped and either jumped or was thrown out a seventh-story window. She suffered permanent, serious brain damage. In a suit by her guardian under 42 U.S.C. 1983, the district court denied some of defendants’ claims of qualified immunity. The Seventh Circuit reversed in part, noting that whether police should have understood Eilman’s need for medical care is a factual issue and that police may have made her situation worse by releasing her far from where she was arrested.Easterbrook
The court issued a subsequent related opinion or order on May 17, 2012.
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