Canadian Man Apprehended by Mental Health Authorities After Spending a Few Days Giving Away Money


Richard Wright spent last week giving away silver coins and CA$50 and CA$100 bills across Halifax, Nova Scotia. He was reportedly stopped by police for a "wellness check" shortly after driving back to his hometown, Charlottetown, Prince Edward's Island, about 200 miles away. According to The National Post:
"They think he is sick and has mental issues … but I know he does not," wrote Mr. Wright's teenaged daughter, Chelsey, in a Sunday night Facebook post.
Since Thursday, she wrote, her father has been held in the psychiatric ward of Charlottetown's Queen Elizabeth Hospital, all because "he had some extra money so he decided to share it around with some homeless and needy people in Halifax and Dartmouth."
And strangely, Mr. Wright was hospitalized in P.E.I. only hours after his mental condition had been given a pass by Halifax psychiatrists.
Wright was stopped by cops in Halifax earlier, and police called for a "Mental Health Mobile Crisis Team." Police admitted he wasn't breaking any laws and said they let him go.
The local Metro in Halifax reported last week about the "mystery man" who was going around town giving away money. Witnesses and recipients described him as dressing normally, often telling them to thank God or "pay it forward." At least one pair of recipients attributed statements about the "one percent" and taking the wealth back to the mystery man, revealed as Wright in this week's reporting.
Various commenters at The National Post pointed out that the Canadian prime minister, Stephen Harper, and politicians in Ottawa and provincial capitals could be committed for "handing out money without a good reason" as the top post there puts it.
The mental health authorities in Prince Edward's Island insist Wright could not have been committed without two physicians believing he could harm himself or others. Though the health department says it's restricted by privacy guidelines in what it can share about the Wright case specifically, a spokesperson told The Post that patients in their system are there "because they can benefit from the care that we provide."
h/t Juice
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Insert random *Loonie* joke here.
Yeah I've been pondering that one too, but nothing is coming.
Q: Why did the Polack give away a bunch of loonies?
A: Cause he's so dang stupid.
Based upon Hugh's last name IRL, I'm guessing you are on some sort of shit list now.
Hugh hates Raising Arizona?
I actually do hate that movie. But I think PM was referring to my Polish heritage, which is ridiculous. If I hated everyone who bore a distaste for filthy pollocks such as myself, I'd basically never talk to anyone.
Now if you'll excuse me, I have some screen doors to install on a submarine.
Polack didn't spell polack correctly.
Did you ever find the second guy to help you change that light bulb?
I know we have a 'Florida Man' posting on this blog. Do we have a 'Canadian Man' lurking about?
It's crazy to think people might help others without the government imposing taxes to pay for welfare. This person is helping others without the government's assistance; therefore he is crazy. QED.
I'm almost certain that the reason he's still in the hospital is due to some Kafkaesque routine--you know, he wouldn't be there if he wasn't crazy, but he can't leave until he's cured, and he can't be cured unless he stops insisting he's not crazy...
Sounds more like Catch 22.
that pretty much IS Catch 22
Definitely an instance of Catch 22.
The mental health authorities in Prince Edward's Island insist Wright could not have been committed without two physicians believing he could harm himself or others.
If that's really the standard, anyone can be committed at any time. I mean, anyone could harm themselves or others.
The standard in the states tends to go more to an "imminent threat" of (significant) harm.
If that's really the standard, anyone can be committed at any time.
So keep your nose clean, Citizen.
And even with that standard, it is surprisingly easy to wind up trapped in an ER if you say the wrong thing, as I recently learned (I was not the one trapped there, in case anyone wonders).
*squints*
Suuure.
There are these bugs, they're under my skin! I can feel them clawing inside my flesh and have to cut them out with a rusty grapefruit spoon.
Is probably something you shouldn't tell ER doctors. Let's all learn from Zeb's mistake and do better next time.
Always insist on a sterilized grapefruit spoon.
Eh, the tetanus helps kill the bugs.
While I can't speak for Canada's system, I don't think it's that bad here in the States. Where it fails it's more likely attributable to an overworked staff afraid of getting sued rather than any particular malice.
That did seem to be pretty much it.
I did very well controlling myself after repeatedly hearing that ____ was there voluntarily, but if she left they would call the police. Um.
Yes. The practical upshot is that they really don't make a practice of keeping people very long. It's not like the movies. They've got limited space and manpower so they focus more on stabilization than in-depth treatment.
"because they can benefit from the care that we provide."
Which is basically the same reasoning this man applied to giving money to people with one major exception: He can't use the all-important "we" that allows groups to do things that would be illegal for individuals without sounding crazy or pretentious.
Well, I suppose you could argue that he is harming himself and his family financially. But I don't think that is what "likely to harm himself or others" is supposed to mean.
This is definitely a situation where better safe than sorry should not apply. IF someone is acting all crazy and violent and threatening suicide or to hurt someone, fine, take him into PC. But otherwise, you need to give people the benefit of the doubt.
If he's walking around with a bag of money giving it away to people I could see stopping him for a few minutes to see if everything is okay, but if he's clearly coherent then yeah, let him go.
I can see verifying that it's really his money he's giving away.
It's cash, possession is ownership. And regardless, "He might have acquired it through illegitimate means" is not probable cause.
It's Like, I don't care about nothin man,
roll another blunt, Yea (ohh ohh ohh),
La da da da da da La, Da Daaa,
La da da da, La da da da, La da da daaa
I was gonna get some free Loonies until I got high
I was gonna get up and find the dude givin' but then I got high
my wallet is still empty and I know why (why man?) yea heyy,
- cause I got high [repeat 3X]
(La da da da da da da da da)
He's obviously insane. Why would he give his money to random individual strangers, when he could put it to good use agitating for higher taxes?
Any charity must go through the government. Otherwise they'd have to get real jobs.
I think the issue is that he was giving away his money. All sane people give away other peoples' money.
The Can-Con is getting pretty thick around here.
He was probably on seventh Avenue; he should have known you can't give it away there.
ALTERNATE JOKE: "Chief, we got a situation here. There's a guy giving away money, claims he's a Rotarian...Sumerian...Samaritain."
I laughed at the first one.
OT: Gladwell gives an interesting summary of failed negotiations at Waco
I think he misses the point that the ATF and the FBI were acting in the role of thugs that did not want to seem impotent, but he does illustrate the complete disconnect over basic tenets and priorities.
It's been discussed.
This is literally the story in "Cinderella Man" by Rush.
"Try though they might they cannot steal your dreams-" Wait, it looks like they can actually steal your dreams.
RUFUS? How ya gonna get to LA by givin out all yer money? Tacos here are cheap, but they ain't free.
Well, he's obviously very religious, so he must be insane. No room for any gods but the State!
Just think what they would do to Santa Claus!
Man, the full quote from the bitch at the end is even better: "it is important for the public to understand that patients are admitted to our hospitals, programs and/or health-care services because they can benefit from the care that we provide."
Listen, public, and understand...
More patients benefits the union. Let's turn everyone into a patient.
I gotta hundred bucks for riding a test motorcycle for a month. Hard work I know. I basically gave the money away because it felt unearned. VFW guys got a twenty. TIpped a waitress a ten on a cheap breakfast. Lock me ... I'm crazy!
Anybody remember the name of the guy who was giving away money, the guy the song "Come & Get It" was said to have been written about? Only it turned out he had a lot less $ than he pretended.
Prince Edward's Island
It's Prince Edward Island, you moron. No possessive.