Dr. charged in molestations suffers from dementia
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. (AP) - The attorney for a once-prominent child psychiatrist accused of molesting minors says his client suffers from severe dementia and should be released from a state hospital.
The San Mateo County Times reports (http://bit.ly/Ic8jhT ) that 80-year-old Dr. William Ayres - the former president of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry - was evaluated at Napa State Hospital and found to suffer from "significant deterioration."
His 2009 trial on nine counts of lewd and lascivious conduct with a minor under 14 ended with a hung jury, and last year he was committed to Napa.
Ayres was arrested in 2007 after accusations from at least 11 men who said the doctor touched their genitals during therapy sessions when they were boys.
District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe has vigorously opposes Ayres' release.
Information from: San Mateo County Times, http://www.sanmateotimes.com
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Updated: 04/28/2012 08:12:00 AM PDT
father, he repeats questions and stories and when she brings a variety of
foods, he has trouble recognizing them.
Accused child molester Dr. William Ayres' family seek his release from hospital
Attorney says Ayres' dementia increasing
Posted:
04/28/2012 08:11:30 AM PDT
REDWOOD CITY -- Accused
child molester Dr. William Ayres has difficulty keeping track of time or the day
of the week and rates as "severely impaired" on a dementia test, according to
court documents submitted Friday in the case of the once-prominent child
psychiatrist.
In a motion petitioning for his client's
release from Napa State Hospital, attorney Jonathan McDougall argues that Ayres'
mental state is deteriorating. The motion includes letters from Ayres' adult
children, asking for their father's release, and the summary of an evaluation by
a Napa doctor who conducted a neuropsychological evaluation April 18, finding
the 80-year-old has suffered "significant deterioration" in his mental
functioning.
Ayres appeared Friday in San Mateo County
Superior Court for a hearing on whether he can be transferred to an unlocked
senior facility or released for outpatient treatment. He appeared frail and
notably thin. His white beard, once close-cropped, was long and unkempt.
Can't track time
Judge John Grandsaert
ultimately postponed the hearing until Thursday at the request of the District
Attorney's Office, but the motion submitted by McDougall shed new light on the
condition of his client, whose trial on charges of molesting several young male
patients at his San Mateo office ended in a hung jury in 2009.
Ayres' daughter, Barbara, said in a letter
to Grandsaert that, during her weekly visits with her
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"He can still tell time, but he does not
know what day of the week it is nor does he know what time of day it is,"
Barbara Ayres said in the letter. "He reports that he no longer knows what to
expect from moment to moment. He no longer even tries to track what will happen
further out than a week."
Ayres' other child, Robert, told the judge
there is no hope for his father's condition to improve, and keeping him at Napa,
separated from his family and without stimulation, serves only to punish
him.
"It's utterly heartless and
unconstitutional to deliver a punitive ruling when my father's presumption of
innocence remains intact after the prosecution's failure to convict him in
2009," Robert Ayres wrote.
Ayres was required to stay at Napa for a
minimum of 180 days after the district attorney, who wanted to try him a second
time on molestation charges, conceded last year that Ayres' mental health was in
decline, and he could not aid in his defense. That milestone passed this week,
and Ayres was transported for a hearing from Napa to the Hall of Justice in
Redwood City.
A 'setup'
Ayres, who suffers from
several physical ailments, including loss of muscle control in his legs, sat in
a wheelchair at the defense table. He complained of being cold, and he told
McDougall that he hadn't been given a T-shirt to wear underneath his orange jail
clothes, like other inmates. It was, he said to McDougall, "a setup."
"They forgot to give me a T-shirt," Ayres
said. "They forgot. Yeah. Right. Sure."
When a sheriff's deputy handed him an
orange shirt, Ayres made a motion to take off the shirt he was wearing -- until
McDougall stopped him.
Asked about his client's seeming paranoia,
McDougall said outside court it could be a result of his failing mental
health.
"I think it is a byproduct of dementia and
cognitive problems," McDougall said. noting that Ayres was "focused more on this
T-shirt than his court appearance."
Several doctors are expected to testify
Thursday as to whether Ayres should remain at Napa. District Attorney Steve
Wagstaffe said Ayres should not be released.
"We aggressively oppose that and will do
so next week," Wagstaffe said. "He belongs at Napa in our mind."
Contact Aaron Kinney at
650-348-4357.
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