My name's Gina Tatto, and
my brother was mentally unwell.
He didn't get the help that he
needed when he needed it the most.
It ended in tragedy, heartbreak.
Two families have been torn apart,
one life lost.
These are the families
that Australia's mental health
system has failed.
My name is Vicki Walker.
I'd just like to talk to you about
what happened with my son Clinton
in December 2016.
Please don't judge my son Clinton.
He didn't get the help he needed
and the help that he'd asked for,
and as a result of that,
myself and his girlfriend
were stabbed.
There's a terrible cost
when people are denied
the mental health care they need.
We begged and we begged
for my son to be admitted
to a mental health bed
but was told that
there was a bed block
and no beds available.
So we took my son home
and two days later...
..he killed my grandson.
REPORTER: This family tragedy
played out in a quiet cul-de-sac
at around 7:00 this morning.
Tonight, on Four Corners
we investigate
how our overburdened
mental health system
is failing those
desperately seeking help,
and reveal public safety
is being compromised
by a lack of access to treatment.
Hi. I'm Clancy Daly.
I'm a mother of a schizophrenic boy,
mentally ill.
It's just so hard,
and I begged for them to take him
and couldn't get the help
because the way things are.
And it wasn't because the people
weren't doing their job,
it was because
they could only do so much.
The system is wrong.
One morning in November 2016,
Clancy Daly's son Ben left
the family home just after daybreak.
A short time later,
he was captured on CCTV
at the local shopping centre.
Ben Daly had a long history
of mental illness.
Tell me, what is Ben like
when he's unwell?
Well, the first thing is
he starts pacing.
As sad as it is, he does a drooling,
which is really embarrassing to him.
Then he starts a horrible
high-pitched scream
when the voices are so bad.
And I have to get the medications -
as soon as I see that anything's
starting to go wrong,
I had to get the medications
into him quick.
His mother
had been trying for months
to get him admitted
into a psychiatric hospital.
I wanted them to take him away
and put him in a safe environment
and medicate him
and get him mentally well
before he was released.
And what happened?
Nothing.
They took him to hospital, got him
medicated, got him calmed down,
and sent him back home to me.
And then sometimes when they'd
send him back home to me,
three hours later, he was off again
and I'd have to ring again.
On that November morning,
CCTV shows Ben Daly walking
from the shops to a nearby bus stop.
Moments later he randomly stabbed
an innocent stranger in the neck.
The man Ben Daly killed
was landscaper Ian Baz Bosch,
a loving father of
two small children.
My name is Emerald Baz.
My husband was killed by a man
with severe mental health issues.
I'm here because I'd like to see
a change in mental health services
to prevent this sort of tragedy
from happening again.
Ian Baz Bosch had been
on his way to buy food
for a kid's birthday party.
To someone who's never met
and didn't know Ian,
how would you describe him to them?
He was just kind, funny, gentle.
He was very generous with his time.
You know, he'd always
stop and listen,
and he would always try and help
as much as he could.
Clancy's son Ben was first
diagnosed with schizophrenia
in his early 20s.
He struggled with taking his
anti-psychotic medication.
He also used ice and cannabis.
He told me, he said,
"If I use the drugs,
"I get two hours' break
of screaming voices."
And I just said to him,
"Don't do it in my home
"and don't do it around me."
But...I didn't want to condone it,
but I understood it.
Four months before the killing,
Clancy warned doctors her son was
becoming increasingly violent.
Did he ever hurt you?
Uh...
He king-hit me one day because
he thought I didn't wash my hands.
He was admitted to hospital
for five days and released.
Fearing for her safety,
Clancy started locking herself
in a separate part of the house.
When I was going to go to bed,
I would say to him,
"Get your food for the night,
"get your drink for the night,
go and shower,
"have your toilet, get a toilet roll
"and take the portable bush potty
that we had for camping,
"take that in case you get
a thing in the night,
"but I'm going to
lock you in your room."
I think people at home
would be shocked to hear that
you were forced to lock up
your mentally ill son
because you were worried
he would hurt someone.
Well, I wouldn't kick him out.
So there was no choice.
They couldn't house him,
they wouldn't take him.
I was left with it.
After his last hospital stay,
mental health workers
visited most days
to ensure he was
taking his medication.
They would not take Ben.
They'd come out,
they'd ask the 12 questions.
And if a schizophrenic can get it
together for that time frame
to answer those questions,
and then straight after be
mentally, totally gone.
And so they'd go and say, "He's
left with you 'cause he's sane."
They'd leave me with him
and then two hours later,
I'm ringing the police
and ambulance again.
The court was told Ben Daly
was a paranoid schizophrenic
and drug user.
When he inflicted the fatal wound,
the angels inside his head
were telling him
to hunt and kill paedophiles.
REPORTER 2: Mr Daly claims at
the time he was so mentally ill
he did not have the capacity
to control his actions
and to know what
he was doing was wrong.
Late last year a judge found
Ben Daly not guilty of murder
because he wasn't of sound mind.
He's detained indefinitely
in secure psychiatric care.
It took the murder of
an innocent person, Ian...
..for Ben to be removed
from the community
and receive treatment.
There is something seriously wrong
with the system.
Emerald Baz wants her children
to understand
the man who killed their father
needed help.
I said, "He has a mental illness
and he's not well.
"He's not thinking right."
I said, "He's not necessarily
a bad person.
"He's done a terrible thing,
you know, he's done a bad thing...
"..and sometimes people
that have mental illnesses
"do things that don't make sense."
It's frustrating because you just
know that something has to be done
and obviously what is currently
available is not sufficient.
It's not working.
There are terrible gaps
in our system.
Patients, I think, come to harm
on a regular basis
and we're incapable
of providing care
for...certainly for
the sickest patients
in our community on a regular basis.
There's not enough capacity
in our system.
There's not enough acute beds.
There's not enough capacity
in our community
and there's not enough
services provided
to provide 24-hour-a-day services.
The Government of Western Australia
last month announced
it would fund 20 new
mental health beds.
But across Australia, acute mental
health services are under-resourced
and struggling to cope with demand.
I've lived through
the last 30, 40 years
of mental health care in Australia.
I've seen the Burdekin inquiry
appear in the 1990s,
which swept away the old asylums,
and there was a tremendous optimism
that we were going
to develop a modern
community-based system of care.
And we reduced the number of beds
on the basis
that we would have strong, dynamic,
effective community
mental health services.
That promise was broken by
every single state government
in this country.
We did not develop those sustainable
systems and they've just crumbled.
Australian Institute of Criminology
data shows over the past decade
around 10% of homicide offenders
were found to have a mental illness.
I think the tragic cases
are happening
with monotonous regularity.
You know, we know
there's about half a dozen homicides
by the mentally ill
in New South Wales every year.
About half of them have presented
to mental health services
in the weeks or two beforehand.
There's reluctance
to talk about this group
because it might stigmatise
the wider group of people
with mental illness
who, you know,
do not present a risk of violence,
who are not violent or dangerous.
I don't think it's helpful
to ignore the problem,
but it is helpful
to have balance and perspective.
# I'm only one call away
# I'll be there to save the day
# Superman's got... #
# I'm only one call away. #
Before this catastrophe,
I had a life.
I had a beautiful son,
and a beautiful grandson.
And within a blink of an eye,
it changed.
It changed my life.
It changed the family's life,
and it will never, ever
be the same again.
We begged, and we begged
for my son to be admitted
to a mental health bed,
but was told that there was
a bed block, and no beds available.
We took my son home
and two days later...
..he killed my grandson.
WOMAN: I still miss him every day,
still want him to come back.
I keep asking myself
why it happen like that.
Why is it happen to me
and my son and my partner?
You want to put onion on, too, Mum?
I have no onion.
You did have a red one.
For legal reasons
we can't use the real names
of anyone in this family.
We've changed them for this story.
It's not supposed to be dry, Mum.
I know, I know
it's not supposed to be mooshy.
Maybe a bit of...
Oil.
Yeah.
Susan's son Michael
has schizophrenia.
That's good now.
Yeah.
Ann is Michael's partner.
They had a baby boy in 2012.
And I thought, "Oh my gosh."
I have never been
so proud or so happy
as I was that day, first grandson.
He was very good. He loved his son.
He took him everywhere.
He used to...
..pick him up, put him
over his shoulder and walk.
Like, so proud that he was a father.
Wheels.
Ooh, wheels! Good job, Daddy.
You're an excellent man, Daddy,
I like you're a excellent man.
He good. He love his son so much.
Couldn't imagine
how much he loved that boy.
This...this one here. Like that.
OK?
Not long after his son
started school,
Michael's mental health deteriorated.
Be good for Daddy.
Bye-bye. Have fun.
You could tell it by his...
the tone of his voice,
the way that he sits,
the way that he's trying
to tell us something
but doesn't quite know
how to get it out.
So we knew that he was not well.
We took him to Hornsby Hospital
and he admit that straightaway,
by one of the psychologists there.
So she found a bed for him.
What did doctors assume
was wrong with him?
That he hadn't been
taking his medication.
In fact he was, but the high dose
simply wasn't working anymore.
Doctors changed his medication.
The switch to a medication
that is lower in potency
and proved to be ineffective
for his symptoms,
and as a result of that switch,
there was a relapse.
After a month in hospital
he was discharged
to the care of his
local community mental health team.
PROF. McGORRY: When you change
a medication,
you don't know if the new medication
is going to work
as well as the old one,
so you really do
have to monitor the person
very, very carefully
in that early period after changing,
probably for the next few weeks,
actually.
And the system,
because it's so weak and threadbare,
is unable to do that, really.
Ann was worried
as her partner's behaviour
became increasingly erratic.
He get a little bit confusing
and talking about, you know,
just the devil,
God, something like that.
I keep monitoring him.
Keep watching him,
watch what's wrong with him.
But he seemed to be...
not getting better.
He stopped eating,
but he still take medication
from discharge from hospital.
Michael was seen by community
mental health workers several times.
When they ask my partner questions,
he always say, "I'm alright.
I'm fine." And that's it.
And they not even
want to ask me any question.
I'm trying to push so hard
to tell them he not well,
he not good, he need help...
..but they just ignore me.
In a last-ditch attempt to get help
the family took him back to Hornsby
Hospital's mental health unit.
When you said, "He needs to be
admitted," what did they say to you?
There's no beds. There's a bed block
on the North Shore.
I said to her
that he'd just come out of hospital
and that he was having thoughts
that his son was the devil.
Anyway, I pleaded with her.
Oh, my God, I've never pleaded
so much in my life.
I've never pleaded so much.
Anyway, with that, I took my son,
I took him out.
I said, "Come on, we'll go."
And he's going, "I want to go home
now. I want to go to bed."
He said, "I'll be OK. I'll be OK.
I'll sleep it off."
He was in need of some attention.
He was so in need of some attention,
but they just...
..just weren't interested.
They just weren't interested.
Two days later,
their lives changed forever.
I took his partner to work
and then I went back
to get him ready for school.
REPORTER: Good morning.
A 5-year-old boy has died
after been stabbed
in a horrific case
of domestic violence in Sydney.
REPORTER: Weighed down
with shock and grief,
a grandmother
falls into the arms of police.
REPORTER: A 36-year-old man,
believed to be the boy's father,
has been taken into police custody
and is currently being questioned.
REPORTER: Sources close to the family
say he is a victim, too,
a man who tried over and over again
to get help.
I saw him in prison about,
I don't know,
four or five weeks after this event,
and he was still acutely unwell,
actually,
with florid delusional beliefs
and other signs of acute psychosis.
Did he have an understanding
of what had occurred
when you interviewed him?
Not the first time, no.
He's still affected
by acute delusions
and just didn't have
a full appreciation of it.
Four Corners has obtained the Health
Department's internal investigation
which catalogues
a disturbing litany of failures.
It shows poor communication:
..and lack of checks led to
a lower dose of antipsychotic
being given to Michael.
Critically, the report states
that mistake:
New South Wales Health
told Michael's family:
The Health Department
told Four Corners
it's implemented
all the report's recommendations
including improving
communication and staffing.
(PRAYS IN NATIVE LANGUAGE)
Michael was found
not guilty of murder
by reason of mental illness
and is now in a secure
forensic hospital indefinitely.
His partner Ann seeks solace
in her Buddhist faith.
(PRAYS IN NATIVE LANGUAGE)
I'm not angry with him,
even first day when it happened.
I worry about him, what he's
gonna be doing in the future.
I forgive him, the first time.
I'm concerned,
I worry he's gonna get hurt,
he's not gonna get fixed,
he's not gonna get better.
If your son had been admitted
to hospital that day,
do you think this would've happened?
No. No, definitely not.
Because he would have
got the help he needed.
He would've had his medication
sorted out.
He would've been fine
and we would not...
..we wouldn't be here today.
What's your reaction when you see
these horrendous crimes on the news?
Well, it's an intense feeling
of frustration
and even I feel
physically sick sometimes
because I think this tragedy
has occurred, it's preventable,
and it's caused endless suffering
for so many people
and it's preventable.
My name's Gina Tatto,
and my brother was mentally unwell.
He didn't get the help
that he needed
when he needed it the most.
It ended in tragedy, heartbreak.
Two families have been torn apart,
one life lost.
NEWSREADER: Joshua Josef Barker
deliberately drove onto a footpath,
killing Dale James Watson
who was walking to the shop.
NEWSREADER 2: A Kings Meadows man
has pleaded not guilty to murder
after a fatal hit-and-run
in Launceston.
The 31-year-old's defence argued
Barker had
post-traumatic stress disorder
after being assaulted
in the area years before.
In March 2018 in Launceston,
Joshua Barker drove his car
off the road, killing another man.
His sister still struggles
to understand
how he could take a stranger's life.
It's not like he woke up
one morning and went nuts.
His mental health deteriorated
over a 10-week period.
Because we're not experienced,
we didn't know what was happening.
We didn't realise the signs.
But to a professional,
they would've known
exactly these signs
of his declining health.
It was an escalation.
Four weeks before the hit-and-run,
Gina called 000
when her brother threatened
to hurt himself with a knife.
And I just said, you know,
"Look, he's not crazy,
"he's not dangerous.
"He's just...he's getting sick.
"We're scared he's gonna
take his own life."
MAN: He was taken by police
to the hospital
so that they could then have him
presented to the hospital
to be given some assessment
and, if appropriate,
admission to the hospital,
or at least observation
and treatment.
Josh arrived at the hospital and
was discharged within half an hour.
What do we do now?
That was our last resort.
Um...
We were deflated, we were exhausted.
We felt so alone.
For the next three weeks,
Joshua Barker had no treatment
while his family struggled to manage
his increasingly erratic behaviour.
I frantically called anyone
and anyone I could.
Anything that said "mental health",
I rang it.
We didn't know what to do.
I reckon I called
eight or nine places.
With all my experience
with these mental health lines,
that's all I got constantly,
was, "He's gotta come in himself."
And I kept saying, "But he
doesn't know he's getting sick.
"He thinks he's fine."
The night before, the 8th,
before Josh took somebody's life,
Josh sat for several hours
with his friend
and talked about all of his beliefs,
believing that the world was divided
into three groups of people
that were angels and devils
and people in between.
His mental health is gone.
He's out of reality.
He's delusional,
he's saying weird things.
Um...so, then I panicked,
started ringing everyone again.
The last person I rang
at 10:45 Friday morning
was the hospital, the CAT team,
Crisis Assessment Team.
Um...told them it was urgent,
we needed help desperately.
And she said, "I'll get someone
from the assessment team
"to call you straight back."
Hour and a half later,
they called back.
It was too late.
Joshua Barker was already driving
to a suburban street
in Launceston's south.
Dale Watson was in the same area.
The two had never met.
My name's Terry Watson.
Um...I'm here because my son
was mowed down at Prospect
by a hit-and-run driver,
by Joshua Josef Barker.
Our family's struggled with this
for near....oh, two years,
and we're still waiting for answers.
Why? And we still get no answers -
why?
Dale Watson died on the pavement.
He went up to see a friend.
He was just walking down
after seeing his friend,
coming around a corner,
going to the shop he was,
and this Josh Barker
come from behind,
rode a gutter.
And Dale was nearly
on a lady's front lawn.
He'd come that far over to hit him.
Joshua Barker kept driving.
The next day,
police charged him with murder.
Prison staff there.
That's the actual prison van
that Josh will be in.
That's family.
That's Gina waving to Josh.
Joshua Barker's murder trial
was held last September.
(VEHICLE REVERSING ALARM
BEEPS REPEATEDLY)
If somebody with a mental illness
ends up before a court,
then that's a failure, in my view.
Somebody with mental illness
should be assisted
through the mental health system.
And if they end up before
the criminal justice system,
it's because
they've not been able to...
..or haven't received
the appropriate care and help
that could've prevented
that happening.
As the jury considered its verdict,
both families waited for news.
(KNOCK AT DOOR)
Better answer the door
'cause it could be security staff.
MAN: We have a verdict.
We have a verdict.
GINA: You're joking.
Yep, so, the jury's obviously
reached a verdict on the case.
Um...when it comes to a verdict,
I'd ask you not to react
no matter what the verdict is, OK?
So, if it's one that goes
in your favour, then don't react.
If it's one that we're
not expecting, then stay calm.
Go!
They won't convene without me, Gina.
It's alright.
But what happens if I do react?
Just do your best, mate.
So, we've just a had
quite a quick outcome from the jury.
After just 40 minutes
of deliberations,
they've found him not guilty
by reason of insanity.
In this,
there's no answers.
You know, I feel sorry
for his parents too.
You know, they've lost a son
in one way,
so, you know,
we're both losers, so...
MAN: Thanks for speaking, Terry.
Good on you, mate.
WOMAN: Thank you.
The judge ordered Joshua Barker
receive psychiatric treatment
in a secure hospital indefinitely.
Our prisons are now our new asylums
and we've got literally hundreds
of people with severe mental illness
in prison, uh...receiving, often,
their first ever treatment.
GINA: It's starting
to get chilly now.
(BLEATS)
Oh, yeah, they've
just found their food.
Joshua Barker's family wants him
to be treated in the community.
Do you worry that, if he is released,
that something like that
could happen again,
he could hurt someone else?
No. No, he's on board now.
He's on board.
He wants...he wants the help.
He wants to make sure that
he never gets to that level again.
Terry Watson believes his son's
killer shouldn't be released.
TERRY: My own opinion is that
he should pay for what he's done
'cause I believe if he gets out,
like I said, he'll do it again.
Do you think there needs to be
better mental health resources
for people like Josh?
Yes, there's gotta be.
There has to be.
Because if we don't do
anything about it,
it's gonna keep going on and on,
and whoever commits a murder
can plead post-traumatic stress,
insanity.
I could kill you here now,
five minutes later,
walk out of that door
and say, "Look, I had
post-traumatic stress.
"I didn't know what I was doing."
Research shows offenders who receive
intensive psychiatric treatment
are far less likely to offend again.
Once they've been treated
and rehabilitated over a long period
and gradually returned
to the community,
they're actually a very safe group.
The forensic mental health system
is effective, but it's costly,
and it is...you know, you don't
really want a mental health system
that can only provide
that level of care
once someone's committed
a very serious offence.
That we have to wait for that
to happen makes no sense.
Well, look, it's a complete
indictment of the system, isn't it?
You know, to think that the only way
you can get good treatment -
and the treatment you get
in the forensic mental health system
is, you know,
the best treatment available -
is by committing a tragic offence,
you know, is, um...
..it's, uh...it's, um...absurd.
My name is Vicki Walker.
I'd just like to talk to you about
what happened with my son Clinton
in December 2016.
Please don't judge my son Clinton.
He didn't get the help he needed
and the help that he'd asked for,
and as a result of that, myself
and his girlfriend were stabbed.
REPORTER: For years, Clinton Walker
collected swords and knives.
Last night, police allege
he used them.
REPORTER: Police found
a harrowing scene at the home,
seizing a machete and a sword,
and forcing their way into a room
where the two women were hiding.
We just heard this
screeching and swearing,
and, "Get out, f-ing this
and f-ing that."
REPORTER: It's believed
that these women
were being repeatedly stabbed
from head to toe
by a man who was armed
with not only a machete
but also a sword.
(BURBLES)
Are you trying to tape me on video?
Are ya? Are ya? Are ya?
Vicki Walker's son Clinton
grew up on the outskirts of Sydney.
MAN: Good on you, Clint.
He was an outgoing child and
a promising rugby league player.
VICKI: He was first diagnosed
with having a mental illness
when he was about 16,
but that was mainly depression,
anxiety.
It wasn't until he was 18
that he got labelled
with PTSD and anxiety.
They didn't know whether
he had schizoaffective disorder
or schizophrenia...
..following an assault on him.
And what was that like
when he was diagnosed?
Oh, it was pretty scary but...
Because no-one really talked to you
about what it meant or...
..what future Clinton could have
or how it would affect him.
Throughout his early 20s Clinton had
a series of hospital admissions.
Clinton would recognise
when he was becoming unwell
and we would, through his help
with his psychiatrist,
get him back into
the private hospital.
In late 2016, Clinton began having
disturbing hallucinations.
He said to me, "Mum, I need to
go back and see a doctor,"
who he hadn't seen a lot
in a couple of years before
because he'd been well.
So, he started seeing him again
and...
Anyway, probably two weeks
before everything happened,
he was really unwell,
he became really paranoid.
Clinton was taken by ambulance
to hospital
in delusional and paranoid state.
He believed his mother's house
was on fire, which was not the case.
And ambulance officers
on arrival on the scene
decided that it would be good
for Clinton
to be examined
by mental health team.
VICKI: He'd never been this anxious
and this paranoid before,
and he'd been scheduled before for
a lot less symptoms, if you like.
So, in Clinton's mind, he thought
that they weren't going
to give him a bed,
he thought that
they weren't going to help him.
After waiting for two hours,
Clinton left without being seen
by the mental health team.
His medical notes recorded
no follow-up was required.
Well, the problem was
he wasn't treated, you know?
He was given, I think,
a small dose of a low potency
antipsychotic medication,
and no arrangement was made
for proper follow-up
of what was an acute relapse
that was really going to require
hospital admission.
I really thought that the police
would come back and get him
because they'd scheduled him
so many times before
for a lot less symptoms
and a lot less bizarre behaviour.
They didn't come and then I thought,
"Oh, well, maybe the after-hours
mental health service
"from the hospital will come."
They didn't come either
and Clinton slept.
The next night,
Vicki woke to Clinton screaming,
and went to check on him.
He had this ornamental sword and...
I didn't know that's what it was,
but that's what
come through the door,
and it happened to get me
right in the abdomen area.
I just froze. I didn't know
what the hell was going on.
I'd never ever seen Clinton
violent before,
let alone...
..do anything like that.
Clinton's girlfriend was also
in the house and rushed to help.
She was stabbed too.
And it was that point that I got
scared because I thought...
.."He doesn't know who I am."
I think that's when he said,
"What sort of mask you got on?"
That's when he cut my face.
And I went to put my hand up
and I got cut on my hand too,
across there.
And then he went outside again,
yelling at neighbours,
"Come and help me."
YEVGENY: Vicki required surgery,
extensive surgery,
as a result of the assault
and now suffering from psychological
symptoms following the assault.
Clinton Walker was arrested
a short time later
and charged with multiple offences,
including grievous bodily harm.
He spent several months in jail
before he was found
not guilty due to mental illness.
In his case, he had fully recovered
by the time he came to court,
and they were able to
make an immediate order
for treatment in the community,
which, as I understand it,
he's continued to receive treatment
in the community for better or worse
and remained well.
You know, if he became unwell
or didn't abide by his conditions,
he would be taken back
into hospital.
Australia's acute mental health
services are under enormous pressure.
Those who work in the system say
the problem can't be ignored.
Public safety is being put at risk
by this continuing neglect of
mental health care in this country,
particularly at the more severe
and complex end of the spectrum.
I'm sort of a bit over people
listening and nodding encouragingly
and saying that they understand.
They actually have to
spend some money
and actually improve the system.
More than three years
after her son attacked her,
Vicki Walker still struggles
with PTSD.
She blames her trauma
on the mental health system
that failed to help him.
Clinton is still living with his mum.
I think a lot of people
would be really shocked to hear
that he's back living with you here
in the house
where he almost killed you.
Probably, but I guess at the time,
I thought it was a temporary thing,
and I didn't want to see Clinton
go back to jail.
I really thought that they were
actually going to put him in like
a supported accommodation-type thing
and work with him and help him
move forward with his life
and give him trauma counselling
and all this stuff.
To date, none of that's happened.
CLINTON: I love you, Mum.
I know.
Clinton Walker watched off camera
as we spoke to his mum.
He didn't want his face to be filmed.
He still has a lot of shame
and guilt because he says to me,
"Mum, you're the one person
that I love more than anything.
"Why would I... You know, why?"
is his big question.
I'm just...
See, it's our life, you know,
it's all the future.
You're alright.
I'll get out of...
No, you're right.
You have to say what...
I thought you needed my support
but... (SPEAKS INDISTINCTLY)
I blame the mental health system
for not recognising Clinton's
psychosis for what it was.
Please don't judge my son
for what happened.
He knew he was unwell
and he asked for help
and didn't receive it.
Captions by Red Bee Media
Copyright Australian Broadcasting
Corporation
