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Chapter 1: Homicidal
 
Cecil Peterson had no history with the police. Even on the day the white stranger insulted his mother, Peterson simply wanted to eat lunch. He sat in his usual seat at the counter of the diner on Woodward Street and ordered his usual BLT and coffee. Somehow he caught the stranger&rsquo s eye in the squinted way that begets immediate conflict between men. The stranger glared. Peterson was not one to walk away from confrontation, but he knew the implications of glaring back. One should not glare back at a white man. So he looked down. But the two men crossed…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Chapter 1: Homicidal
 
Cecil Peterson had no history with the police. Even on the day the white stranger insulted his mother, Peterson simply wanted to eat lunch. He sat in his usual seat at the counter of the diner on Woodward Street and ordered his usual BLT and coffee. Somehow he caught the stranger&rsquo s eye in the squinted way that begets immediate conflict between men. The stranger glared. Peterson was not one to walk away from confrontation, but he knew the implications of glaring back. One should not glare back at a white man. So he looked down. But the two men crossed paths again after Peterson paid his tab and walked outside. And then came the remark. And then came the fight.
 
Two white Detroit police officers happened to be passing by the diner that September day in 1966. They ran to the altercation and tried to separate the combatants. At that point, according to their formal report, Peterson turned on the officers and struck them &ldquo without provocation.&rdquo According to the report, Peterson knocked one officer down and &ldquo kicked him in the side.&rdquo A second police team arrived and assisted in apprehending the &ldquo agitated&rdquo Mr. Peterson. Medics took the first officers on the scene to the Wayne County Hospital emergency room. The ER physician&rsquo s report noted that both officers had &ldquo bruises,&rdquo though neither required treatment. The white stranger was not charged.
 
Peterson was twenty-nine, African American, and an unmarried father of four who worked the line at Cadillac Motor Company. He had not previously come to the attention of the state. He had not been diagnosed or treated for any physical or mental illness. Nor had he been held for crimes or misdemeanors. He had limited interactions with white people and preferred to stay close to home. But on that September day in 1966 his life changed along with his identity. He became a prisoner. And then he became a patient.
 
The Wayne County court convicted Mr. Peterson of two counts of &ldquo assault on a police officer causing injury requiring medical attention&rdquo and sent him to the Wayne County jail on a two- to ten-year sentence. After several weeks of incarceration, prison notes described Mr. Peterson as &ldquo extremely paranoid and potentially explosive,&rdquo screaming that &ldquo the white stranger&rdquo had &ldquo insulted my mother&rdquo and that his &ldquo civil rights&rdquo were being violated. The prison psychiatrist provided a diagnosis of &ldquo sociopathic personality disturbance with antisocial reaction,&rdquo and recommended seclusion, restraint, and continuous doses of Thorazine at 200 milligrams. Within six months, Mr. Peterson&rsquo s unprovoked outbursts became so severe that he earned the distinction of being a &ldquo problem inmate&rdquo who was &ldquo dangerous on the basis of his presenting a threat to the guards.&rdquo Soon thereafter, he began to ramble incoherently. One guard&rsquo s note explained that Mr. Peterson &ldquo occasionally grimaces, remains silent for long minutes, then looks up toward the ceiling with his eyes rolling in all directions.&rdquo A year into his incarceration, Mr. Peterson loudly accused the prison staff of &ldquo depriving him of women.&rdquo They observed him to be &ldquo hostile, suspicious, and increasingly annoyed&rdquo without any apparent provocation. He soon escalated, and the prison psychiatrist was called again. This time the psychiatrist recommended transferring Mr. Peterson to the notorious Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. The transfer sheet described Mr. Peterson as &ldquo HOMICIDAL.&rdquo
 
The drive to Ionia took four hours, much of which Mr. Peterson slept off in the back of the police car. But he stiffened when the vehicle pulled into the winding drive that led up to Ionia Hospital and his attention reached the level of panic when the car doors opened onto the expansive, forty-onebuilding campus of bricks and chimneys and yards and fences and crazy people as far as the eye could see.
 
Dragged inside one of the largest of these buildings, Mr. Peterson shouted and struggled to get away. He said he was an &ldquo African warrior&rdquo and spoke gibberish, which he claimed to be his native African language. Then, in English, he loudly accused the guards of detaining him against his will. He claimed to be under attack by all white men.
 
Sylvan Cabrioto was not fazed. He had been the on-call physician at the Ionia receiving hospital since 1958, fully ten years before Cecil Peterson appeared in his examination room. A first-generation psychiatrist and secondgeneration American, Cabrioto was an authoritative, robust man of fifty-three who had a different bow tie for each day of the week. Treating the steady flow of burglars, peeping toms, pedophiles, and murderers who came through the Ionia doors gave Cabrioto a detached air of competence that undoubtedly resulted from having seen it all before. So he was not intimidated, at least not overtly, when Peterson appeared in the receiving hospital, or when the two prison guards drove off, or even when, after his handcuffs were taken off, Mr. Peterson &ldquo doubled up his fists&rdquo and gestured in a manner that was &ldquo irritable, disturbed, and sarcastic.&rdquo
 
It was, after all, a stance Cabrioto had seen in nearly every one of the growing number of &ldquo Negro&rdquo patients brought to the Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane in the 1960s. One man heard the voice of Jesus telling him to come home. Another was certain that loved ones were trying to poison him. Another performed &ldquo mystic voodoo movements&rdquo while claiming an &ldquo eternal struggle against the white man.&rdquo
 
Like Peterson, most of the men came from &ldquo deteriorated neighborhoods&rdquo of Detroit. Most nonetheless held gainful employment. Like Peterson, each was convicted of a crime against person or property, ranging from larceny to murder to various forms of civil unrest. Few of the men had seen psychiatrists prior to their convictions, though this was not surprising since few psychiatrists resided in the urban sections of Detroit in the 1960s and 1970s. The men passed through various courts, prisons, and other state institutions. By the time they arrived at Ionia, they were nothing if not psychotic. Like Peterson, they hallucinated and ideated, or acted withdrawn, suspicious, paranoid, or combative. They argued, and fought, and resisted, and projected. And, according to Cabrioto and his colleagues, these actions were easily explained with a single diagnosis.
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