September 22, 1995
3801 Connecticut Ave., NW
#136
Washington, DC 20008-4530
Eric H. Holder, Jr.
U.S. Attorney for the District
of Columbia
555 4th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001
Dear Mr. Holder:
Enclosed of your information is a copy of the Order, filed September 20, 1995, by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals that denies my Petition for Rehearing in Freedman v. D.C. Dept. of Human Rights, No. 93-AA-1342. I retain a right to file an appeal in Superior Court. See Memorandum Opinion and Judgment filed January 10, 1995.
The determinations of representatives of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld, the George Washington University Medical Center, and the Government of the District of Columbia (Department of Human Rights) relating in my case to psychiatric diagnoses of severe mental disturbance 1/, potential for violence 2/, plans to procure firearms or other deadly weapons 3/, possible homicidal tendencies 4/, a paranoid (psychotic) mental disturbance featuring delusions relating to the law form of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld 5/, and propensity to lie to conceal the nature and severity of my illness 6/ remain unmodified.
Sincerely,
Gary Freedman
_______________________________________
1/ Jerry M. Wiener, M.D. (Past President, American Psychiatric Association and Psychiatry Department Chairman), Dimitrios Georgopoulos, M.D. (Chief Psychiatry Resident), Suzanne M. Pitts, M.D. (former Chief Psychiatry Resident), Daniel Tsao, M.D. (former Attending Physician), Napoleon Cuenco, M.D. (assessing psychiatrist), and William Fabian, Ph.D. (staff psychologist)
2/ Laurence J. Hoffman, Esq. (managing partner), Dennis M. Race, Esq. and Margie A. Utley (former Director, D.C. Dept. Human Rights)
3/ Christine Robertson (acting under the apparent authority of R. Bruce McLean, Esq., Akin Gump management committee member), and Stacey Schaar
4/ Christine Robertson (acting under the apparent authority of R. Bruce McLean, Esq., Akin Gump management committee member), and Stacey Schaar
5/ William Fabian, Ph.D.
6/ William Fabian, Ph.D. (with the approval of Jerry M. Wiener, M.D.: See Letter of Dr. Wiener's dated 10/4/94 refusing to comment on or modify the psychological test report prepared under Dr. Fabian's supervision, which test report includes the determination that I might have lied on psychological testing to conceal a delusional psychosis)
August 19, 1993 [afternoon]: I meet with GW psych. department chairman, Dr. Jerry M. Wiener to discuss the letter of complaint that I plan to send to the D.C. Board of Medicine. (I thought that it was appropriate that I meet with a Board Certified Psychiatrist before sending the letter of complaint to the D.C. Board of Medicine, and I had first sought to meet with previous psychiatrist, Stanley R. Palombo, M.D. I learned, however, that Dr. Palombo would be away from his office until Monday August 23, 1993. It was upon learning that Dr. Palombo was unavailable that I arranged an appointment with Dr. Wiener). At my meeting with Dr. Wiener he advises that he has read the letter of complaint, a copy of which I submitted to him on August 17, 1993. He states that the letter is incontrovertible evidence of my paranoia, and that my paranoid preoccupations have crippled my life. He states that he declines to investigate the charges made in the letter of complaint to the D.C. Board of Medicine. Throughout the meeting, Dr. Wiener refers to the letter of complaint, copies of which I have forwarded to various parties, as symptomatic of severe psychopathology. Dr. Wiener refuses, however, to reduce to a writing his comments concerning my paranoid mental state that I could then submit to the U.S. Social Security Administration in connection with my disability claim; he reminds me that I had initially agreed that my meeting with him was in his capacity as Psychiatry Department Chairman and not as a psychiatrist conducting a consultation. We do not discuss Dr. Pitts or my current psychiatric treatment, per se, and Dr. Wiener makes no treatment recommendations, which is consistent with the agreed nature of the meeting.
ReplyDeleteYu-Ling Han, who administered psychological testing, alleged that I was deceptive on the testing:
ReplyDelete"Although both test results reflect a valid profile, care must be taken in interpreting the results, as Mr. Freedman had reported to Dr. Pitts about his tendency to deny certain statements pertaining to his persecutory beliefs on these tests. Thus, the salience of the severity of his symptoms may need to be modulated slightly upward."
http://dailstrug.blogspot.com/2009/10/psychological-test-results-gw-may-1994.html