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How Michigan courts can improve when it comes to dealing with people who have mental health issues

Justin Dawson
Courtesy of the Dawson family
Justin Dawson

Stateside's conversations with Tony Dawson, Justin Dawson's grandmother, and Judge Milton Mack, Jr.

Justin Dawson
Credit Courtesy of the Dawson family
Justin Dawson

On yesterday's Stateside, we heard about a young Flint man named Justin Dawson.

Tony Dawson is Justin's grandmother.

"He's 28 years old, but I would say mentally probably about seven or eight years old," she said. "He's always been a good boy. He did graduate from special ed classes – just way behind, way behind mentally."

After his little niece told her therapist that her uncle had touched her inappropriately, Justin Dawson was arrested. He spent nearly a year in jail before the state ruled him incompetent to stand trial.

"He just kept saying, every time we'd see him, 'Have you talked to my attorney? I want to go home. I don't want to be here anymore. I want to go home," Tony Dawson said. "And then he would tell us about other guys in there that would punch him, hit him, or knock him down."

The family has said the Genesee County prosecutor refused their pleas to drop the charges.

"And she said, 'Well, if you want to drop them, that's fine. Now the state will take over.' It was just right from the beginning. They were going to bury him. He didn't have a chance and we kept telling them and telling them, 'He doesn't deserve this. Okay, maybe some mental therapy,' and they would not listen. They did not care about anything we said," Tony Dawson said.

Even though his family wants to have him back at home, he's been sent to Kalamazoo Psychiatric Hospital. They can't afford to make the trip from Flint to visit him.

Today on Stateside, we learn what Justin Dawson's case reveals about the way our courts handle defendants who are mentally ill or developmentally disabled, and what the Michigan courts need to do to meet the mental health crisis.

For that conversation, we turned to Judge Milton Mack, Jr. who has won national recognition for his work on issues related to mental illness. He served as chief judge of Wayne County Probate Court and is now the state court administrator. 

Listen above.

Minding Michigan is Stateside’s ongoing series that examines mental health issues in our state.

(Subscribe to the Stateside podcast oniTunes,Google Play, or with thisRSS link)

Copyright 2021 Michigan Radio. To see more, visit Michigan Radio.

Read more about the Stateside.
Josh Hakala, a lifelong Michigander (East Lansing & Edwardsburg), comes to Michigan Radio after nearly two decades of working in a variety of fields within broadcasting and digital media. Most recently, he worked for Advance Digital where he managed newspaper websites from across the country, including MLive.com. While his resume is filled with sports broadcasting experience (Big Ten Network, 97.1FM The Ticket, 610AM WIP etc.), radio reporting (90.1FM WRTI) and odd jobs (Editor for the FIFA video game series for EA Sports), he brings a passion for news and storytelling to the Stateside staff.