Criminally insane killer goes missing after a field trip to the fair

Deb in IA

Knows that KIDS are better
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Aug 18, 1999
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Well, THIS is disconcerting . . .
Any WHY did it take 2 hours after the disappearance was first noted for the sheriff to be notified????

Criminally insane killer disappears from fair
Posted: Sep 17, 2009 3:44 PM CDT
Updated: Sep 17, 2009 7:19 PM CDT


Story by:
Rob Kauder / Internet Content Manager, KXLY.comSPOKANE -- A criminally insane killer who strangled a woman because voices told him she was a witch has walked away from an Eastern State Hospital field trip to the Spokane Interstate Fair and may be trying to hitchhike home to Sunnyside.

Deputies have been combing the fairgrounds and the area within several blocks of the sprawling complex in search of Phillip Paul, 47, a man with a history of escape and assault in Spokane County in addition to being found criminally insane in the wake of the 1987 strangulation killing of an elderly Granger woman.

Paul was on a field trip to the fair with a group of Eastern State Hospital patients Thursday morning when he disappeared from the rest of his group. The rest of the patients from the group from Eastern State Hospital have been accounted for and taken from the fairgrounds.

The Spokane County Sheriff's Office acknowledges they are "dismayed" with Eastern State's Hospital reporting of Paul's disappearance. While he was reported missing at 1:14 PM apparently Eastern may have known Paul was missing as early as 11:30 AM, more than an hour and a half before they notified authorities about his disappearance.

"It appears now there was a two hour lapse from the point he disappeared from his attendant to the sheriff's office was notified of his escape and obviously that's a concern to us," Sgt. Reagan said. "We're concerned that we were not aware that people of his criminal history were being brought to the fair for day trips. As a courtesy we would have liked to have been notified ahead of time."

"Certainly as a matter of professional courtesy once he disappeared we feel the responsible thing would have been to have been immediately notified," Reagan continued. "As soon as we were notified within 30 minutes we had saturated the fairgrounds with security people and Spokane Valley police officers."

Reagan added that had notification been made to authorities by Eastern State Hospital in "a more timely fashion the odds of catching him would have been much greater."

Shortly before 4 PM the Sheriff's Officer reported they have a witness who says that Phillip Paul walked into a business located in the 3600 block of E. Springfield at 11:30. Authorities say they are between 80 and 85-percent sure this was an actual sighting of Paul.

The man they think might have been Paul was last seen walking westbound from the Sprague/ Trent corridor. Authorities think Paul, who has no money, may be attempting to hitchhike home to Sunnyside in the Yakima Valley where his parents live.

"His sister tells us he calls his parents in Sunnyside virtually every day and that if he's escaped he's headed home," Spokane County Sheriff Sergeant Dave Reagan said.

Paul is described as being 5'9", 207 lbs, Caucasian with brown hair and goatee. He was wearing blue jeans, a blue T-shirt and a red windbreaker.

Field Trip not approved by Fair officials

The fair director confirmed that they never received a request from Eastern State Hospital to have a group of their patients attend the fair and they were unaware a group of patients were at the fair Thursday. Fair officials say they never would have approved such a request.

Eastern State Hospital has declined comment on the incident but Jim Stevenson at DSHS says that field trips are not uncommon. Stevenson says field trips are determined on a case-by-case basis by each patient's treatment team as to whether or not they can participate.

Stevenson said it has nothing to do with their crime but more to do with where they are in their treatment. The number of staff that goes on these field trips is determined by the number of patients that go.

Voices told him Granger woman was a witch

Paul was originally charged with murder in Yakima County in 1987 for the killing of 78-year-old Ruth Mottley in her home near Granger. He was later diagnosed as being criminally insane and suffering from schizophrenia and had been receiving treatment at Eastern State Hospital.

He claimed he heard voices which told him that Mottley was a witch and he strangled her to death.

State Department of Corrections officials confirm that Paul has spent all of his correctional time in mental health facilities such as Eastern State Hospital. Since he was put in the hospital for psychiatric care he has received several opportunities to get out of the hospital.

In 1996 a judge ruled that Paul could attend Spokane Community College during the day as long as he returned back to the hospital at night. Two years later Judge Michael Leavitt ruled Paul could have overnight visits in Spokane as long as he was with an adult member of his family.
 
OMG!

I've been to that fair... it's HUGE... not an appropriate place to take a group of young children... not to mention a group of psychiatric patients. What the heck were those people thinking!?!?

For folks here on the EastCoast, you could equate the Spokane Fair with the Big E. Would you take a group of psychiatric patients to the Big E?
 
Around here- he's the kind of guy that WORKS at the fair.... probably he's blending right in!

BTW- Who's idea to take a bunch of psycho murderers to the FAIR???

"I'll take 'Moron ideas of the year' for a hundred Alex"
 

Yeah I was in Spokane yesterday with DS taking stuff up to his apartment to get ready for college starting next week. We were both dumbfounded that they would take a criminally insane murderer out for a field trip at the Fair... Talk about MORONS! and then to not report him missing for as much as 2 hours :confused3
 
:scared1:
There's got to be an investigation after this is over!

I can see where they need outings for them but remember "they walk among us."

We've got a few halfway houses in the section of city where I live. I don't know what they're in for, but I do see groups of men roaming in the area I don't live in.
 
I guess they thought he was at a point in his treatment where he could be part of the group taken to the fair.

It's a little unfair to put the other patients in the same group as this guy. We have no idea what their issues are.
 
/
Around here- he's the kind of guy that WORKS at the fair.... probably he's blending right in!

BTW- Who's idea to take a bunch of psycho murderers to the FAIR???

"I'll take 'Moron ideas of the year' for a hundred Alex"

Exactly! I find it absolutely astounded they would have "field trips"!!!! Brilliant, just absolutely brilliant.
 
I was thinking "well Sunnyside is pretty small, he'll be recognized", but not if he's been away since he was 24 or so...

And then I was amazed at how much freedom he has! I thought that to be put in that sort of place after such a crime, it means that you didn't know that what you were doing was bad at the time...that you weren't responsible for your actions. So...doesn't that mean that he might still not know what is OK? If he doesn't know, why is he being given these freedoms (going to community college? alone??? as long as he's back at night...this is a guy that killed someone and obviously proved that he didn't know right from wrong!)?


Frightening.

And strange, b/c one of my best college friends was from Granger, and we started college in '87, and I guess we just didn't talk much about news from home (though I think I went there for thanksgiving that year).
 
:eek: They go on field trips?
 
I don't know about the other patients, but there is no way that someone who committed murder (criminally insane or not) should just be walking out among normal people during their sentence.
 
When I worked in a psychiatric nursing, we took patients on field trips all of the time. They generally had to earn it through positive behavior and not being "crazy". I guess the "good news" is, he has been hospitalized and has been taking his medication on a regular basis, so maybe we can assume that he isn't having any auditory hallucinations commanding him to do "bad things"....until the meds wear off.
 
When I worked in a psychiatric nursing, we took patients on field trips all of the time. They generally had to earn it through positive behavior and not being "crazy". I guess the "good news" is, he has been hospitalized and has been taking his medication on a regular basis, so maybe we can assume that he isn't having any auditory hallucinations commanding him to do "bad things"....until the meds wear off.
Exactly....until the meds wear off. That's why someone who did something that violent shouldn't be allowed out of the facility.
 
Great they still haven't located the guy yet. One of his own psychiatrists said that after treating hundreds of patients this guy was the only one he was terrified of...:sad2:
 
I don't know about the other patients, but there is no way that someone who committed murder (criminally insane or not) should just be walking out among normal people during their sentence.

:thumbsup2
Regardless of what I think about an outing for these people, I can't believe they weren't under constant supervision during the trip? How does one just walk away :confused3

When I worked in a psychiatric nursing, we took patients on field trips all of the time. They generally had to earn it through positive behavior and not being "crazy". I guess the "good news" is, he has been hospitalized and has been taking his medication on a regular basis, so maybe we can assume that he isn't having any auditory hallucinations commanding him to do "bad things"....until the meds wear off.

Yes, what is going to happen when his meds wear off?
 
:thumbsup2
Regardless of what I think about an outing for these people, I can't believe they weren't under constant supervision during the trip? How does one just walk away :confused3

One of the articles I read said that there were 11 chaperones for about 38 patients... so that's roughly 3 patients per person. Obviously that's not working real well if one of them wants to walk away I imagine it would be pretty easy to do.
 
One of the articles I read said that there were 11 chaperones for about 38 patients... so that's roughly 3 patients per person. Obviously that's not working real well if one of them wants to walk away I imagine it would be pretty easy to do.

I don't get how 1 adult can't keep track of 3 or even 4 adults. I am in charge of more kids than that when I chaperone fieldtrips, haven't lost one yet :laughing:
 
Wow! I'm glad I live on the Western side of the state. That is just plain scary. :scared1:
 
And for the nurses - if you assume the meds were taken on schedule, and taken either the day of the trip or the day before - how long before the hallucinations start?

Will the years in the hospital have given him the insight to be able to ignore the voices? I only comment because I worked with an individual who managed his schitzophrenia medication dilligently, avoided the situations of pressure, reported to hospital if he contracted colds etc that affected his medication and he said the voices were always with him - he just ignored them.
 
Hmmmm.....I live between Spokane and Sunnyside, in the middle of nowhere...note to self: Be very aware!!
 

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