Zoloft Murder

Written by Eric James
Published February 15, 2005

South Carolina juries are fickle things. During my days with The ItemI once watched a jury of 12 men and women in Bishopville convict a man of murder with no physical evidence, no weapon and the only thing linking the man to the shoot was the testimony of one man, who as the defense pointed out "If (the convict) didn't do it, he did."

A jury from that same town deadlocked on the case of Adrian Bradham, a man who according to the Bishopville Police Department shot and killed storeowner Jitrindra Patel three times in the head.

Now a jury from Charleston found Christopher Pittman guilty of first-degree murder for shotgunnng his grandparents to death, lighting the house on fire and stealing their car when he was 12 and likely acting under the influence of Zoloft.

He will now have to serve two 30-year sentences, the lightest the judge could give. If he behaves and works hard he can probably get out in 26 years or so with a college degree and some vocational training, sometime after his 40th birthday.

Zoloft, an anti-depressive, is considered a "Black Label" drug, which as I understand it is one step away from being illegal because of its known tendency to cause suicidal behavior in children.

Lets forget that children's medication has traditionally been under tested, and we don't know how an 80-pound 12-year-old is going to react to a massively mind altering drug. Lets forget the fact that we are quick to overmedicate children. This boy never had a chance.

I'm not sure where he's going to go. He's typically too young to go to Turbeville Correctional Institute, where most of the state's youthful, ages 17 to 25, are held and he's been sentenced as an adult so I don't think he can be held in the juvenile system any longer.

I've been in Turbeville and Lee County Correctional Institute, a maximum-security state prison near Bishopville. They're no place to spend your life. Every aspect of life is controlled, and when its not controlled you imagine what young, small white kid is going to have to deal with.

His mother abandoned him and his father was so strict it might be considered abusive. There was little family structure for this kid and he had problems because of it.

Here was a neglected overmedicated kid who did a horrible, horrible act, and now the rest of his life is going to defined by that moment until he dies, likely before his 60th birthday, a broken man.

If we send a 15 year old to prison for 30 years we are saying hope is dead. We are saying there is no hope for a productive life and you will only reach the outside world long after the passion and the vibrancy of your life has been used up between concrete block walls and razor-wire tipped fences.

To turn our backs on a troubled kid is to say no to hope, no to justice, no to rehabilitation, that's not who we are as America. Christopher Pittman did a ghastly thing and yes he should be punished, but we must also leave room for hope, because without even a sliver of a brighter day a life is lost.

Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Zoloft Murder
Published: February 15, 2005
Type:
Section: Politics
Filed Under: Politics: Law and Rights
Writer: Eric James
Eric James's BC Writer page
Eric James's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Eric James
Politics: Law and Rights
All Politics Articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — February 15, 2005 @ 16:10PM — Douglas Mays [URL]

Court TV recently ran a for TV movie they made entitlted "The Exonerated". A very well made movie of the innocent held in prison for years before being proven innocent. A story derived from actual cases.

Could this be a case?....

#2 — February 15, 2005 @ 16:21PM — Al Barger [URL]

Damn that Zoloft gang! I hate when a big Zoloft tablet sneaks up behind you with a shotgun and blows your brains out.

They ought to get all those Zoloft's in jail before they kill again!

#3 — February 15, 2005 @ 16:21PM — Eric Olsen

thanks Matt, very sensitive presentation of a true tragedy all the wa yaround - why was he tried as an adult? He was 12, for God's sake

#4 — February 15, 2005 @ 16:59PM — Al Barger [URL]

If you're evil enough to shotgun your grandparents and burn their house down on them, then you need to be gone. It doesn't matter that he was 12- those folks are just as dead as if he were 50. Nor will "he was just a lad" or "he was high on Zoloft" be any comfort to the families of the next person he kills if he's ever let loose.

If he's this evil at age 12, what's he going to be once his balls drop?

#5 — February 15, 2005 @ 17:00PM — Aaman [URL]

He'll be zo low

#6 — February 15, 2005 @ 18:05PM — bhw [URL]

Sad, sorry story.

We're very hypocritical about the way we treat kids in this country. We don't want them to drink, smoke, have sex, decide what they learn in school, or god forbid, learn about homosexuality. They must be tested and monitored -- to the point that one school is famously putting ID tracking devices around students' necks. We keep very tight control on them in all aspects of their lives, giving them no freedom or responsibility because they're children after all and they need our protection.

Until they do something wrong. Then suddenly they're completely responsible for their actions and can be tried as adults for crimes committed before they're teenagers.

#7 — February 15, 2005 @ 20:04PM — DPasquin

The jury pool - like the DNA pool - must be mighty shallow in South Carolina. What kind of a system sends a 15 year old to prison with no hope of every getting out one day? A system with no mercy. And where mercy is lacking there is no heart. Just a few questions enter my mind, such as, did the kid have an attorney when he made his 'statement' at the time of arrest? was he on Zoloft and/or Paxil at the time of the alleged statement? Why did his lawyers stipulate that he commited the act and thereby cost the child any opportunity to see the light of day? (because they wanted to put Pharma Inc on trial - big $$$???)? If you watch the child on the videos they're showing on tv you can see he's remorseful. What sort of 'meanness, wickedness' lurks in the hearts of the jury and the grandstanding prosecutors? What civilized society tries children as adults, and when they're convicted sends them to adult prison? And let's not let the 'evil empire' of Pfizer off the hook. Just a little while ago they issued a press statement that acknowledged what a tragic series of events had occurred, but their product was blameless. Really? Tell that to the kid. Tell that to the families all over this country - o heck, the world - whose loved ones in the darkness of depression were prescribed Zoloft, or Prozac, or Paxil, or WellButrin or any of the whole class of SSRI antidepressants and committed suicide or murder. The whole phenomenon of road rage coincides with the introduction of this class of drugs in the early 1990's. The guy in Louisville who shot and killed anumber of colleagues at work, and then killed himself, he was the first, but not the last. One of the killers at Columbine had just started taking an SSRI antidepressant a few weeks prior to that unhappy incident. THe list goes on. And big Pharma Inc continues to line the pockets of politicians to protect their ever growing empire. George W. Bush has a plan to test every child in the country for mental illness, and his friends at Eli Lilly - makers of Prozac are behind him, providing the 'expertise' to medicate your child whether you like it or not. In Britain the water table is polluted with SSRI antidepressants - who needs the pills, just drink the water! No, Christopher Frank Pittman is a troubled KID, a child, not a man. He will get no mercy in South Carolina, or in any other state in these United States. Pfizer guarantees it (gotta protect the stockholders and executives). (By the way, I'm a mean spirited registered Republican - with no stock in any pharmaceutical company)

#8 — February 15, 2005 @ 20:11PM — DPasquin

"Damn that Zoloft gang! I hate when a big Zoloft tablet sneaks up behind you with a shotgun and blows your brains out."

What a brilliant assinine statement. Zoloft was never approved by the FDA for use by children. Family doctors - not psychiatrist - have been prescribing Zoloft, Prozac and Paxil to medicate kids with problems some adults don't want to deal with. One side effect of Zoloft is akathisia - a sensation describes wonderfully as thousands of of insects moving rapidly under your skin - there very skin you want to crawl, jump, or blow your brains out of. Don't make uneducated assinine statements. Go sit on the couch and have another Bud (i.e. go self medicate).

#9 — February 15, 2005 @ 21:18PM — RJ [URL]

The "Zoloft defense" reminds me of the "Twinkee defense."

IOW, it's bullshit.

This kid murdered two people. Not just any people, but his own flesh and blood.

Then he committed arson.

Then he stole a car.

But, hey. The bleeding hearts wanna welcome him back into the family of humanity, ASAP.

Well, NIMBY!

#10 — February 15, 2005 @ 22:06PM — bhw [URL]

All I've heard the "bleeding hearts" say is that 12-year-olds shouldn't be tried as adults.

And he *will* be released someday if he serves his sentences concurrently or gets paroled. What a gift he'll be then, after spending the rest of his childhood and all of his adulthood in prison.

#11 — February 16, 2005 @ 00:27AM — Big Time Patriot [URL]

What is the opposite of "bleeding hearts"? If you hate bleeding hearts, what kind of heart is it that you claim to have for yourself? Are you a proud "dried-up heart"? A "heart as hard as stone"?

Catch phrases are handy short hand sometimes, but sometimes the use of them indicates more about the speaker than those spoken of.

If you hate "bleeding hearts", what kinds of hearts do you prefer?

#12 — February 16, 2005 @ 00:45AM — roleft

I have hope....I hope that he never gets out to kill again. I hope that anyone, regardless of age, who savagely murders someone and then burns their house will be put UNDER that jail. I hope that this country will quit excusing heinous crimes under the guise of the killer being "a young kid", "only 12 years old", etc. I hope that this is the beginning of a trend of common sense and swift and complete punishment for killers.

#13 — February 16, 2005 @ 00:59AM — bhw [URL]

I never excused the crime.

And he will likely be getting out, possibly to kill again. You can pretty much guarantee that he won't receive proper medical treatment or rehabilitation during his 30-year sentence.

#14 — February 16, 2005 @ 15:14PM — Angela Chen Shui [URL]

Thanks, Matt. I watched Larry King's coverage of the breaking news of his conviction last night. I don't get how a 12 year old gets tried as an adult, nor the seeming lack of understanding on the part of the jurors of the effects the drug can have.

The juror who was interviewed interpreted the boy's seemingly genuine tears as 'tears being turned on and off for effect'.

Turns out his Zoloft prescription seems to have been INCREASED too.

The father said the defence team was good but I got the feeling the whole time through that they were a bit laid back on this one. While the State was busy objecting to everything they could, the defence's strategy was to lay out all the facts and hope that the jury would see things their way.

Will watch to see if they handle the appeal and if they mix in a good dose of passion to their defence.

Thanks again. Knew someone would cover it here... ;-)

#15 — February 16, 2005 @ 16:43PM — JaneinCanada [URL]

Some of the comments on here are really fucked up.

That poor kid, and I do really feel sorry for him, was very unfortunately born in the states.

If he'd been born in Canada, it would be a completely different story.

Health Canada, unlike the FDA, has aknowledged that SSRIs like Zoloft can children to be increasingly suicidal AND violent. The FDA will only admit to more suicidal.

Had he been living in Canada, he would have been tried under the Young Offenders Act, his name would not have been released in the media and his maximum sentence would have been two years in a youth correctional facility.

And yes prosecuters can ask for a young offender to be tried as an adult, but in this case I seriously doubt they would have.

I really don't see how you can say it would better serve society to lock this kid up than to get him the help he seriously needs.

If you ask me, the greater evil is jailing this child and personally, no wonder the United States is rated so poorly amongst developed countries for it's human rights.

#16 — February 16, 2005 @ 16:45PM — Terry Turner [URL]

Scientists at the FDA have accused their bosses of covering up data showing the link between antidepressants and teen suicides.

See: http://watchingwashington.blogspot.com/2004/09/depressing-news-from-washington.html

http://watchingwashington.blogspot.com/2004/09/tough-pill-for-big-pharma-to-swallow.html

I've not seen much research into "homicidal" behavior -- but it doesn't seem like it'd be much of a stretch.

It's frightening that big pharma's profits may have been placed ahead of the safety of this kid and his late grandparents.

#17 — February 16, 2005 @ 17:17PM — JR

RJ: This kid murdered two people. Not just any people, but his own flesh and blood.

Actually that's a mitigating factor. It'd be far more outraged if he came after my flesh and blood.

#18 — February 16, 2005 @ 17:50PM — Shark

Al Barger: "...If he's this evil at age 12, what's he going to be once his balls drop?"

His balls won't drop; he's on steriods, too.


PS: It's just too bad the Big Drug companies haven't invented a "compassion" pill.

(But then again, we couldn't despise the slobbering, unevolved troglodyte motards living in South gonna rise again Carolina.

...nevermind...

#19 — February 16, 2005 @ 17:56PM — Al Barger [URL]

Shark, I can see how you'd take it being his own family as a mitigating factor, but I don't. To me, the obvious way of seeing that is that if he's willing to do that to his OWN people, what would he be willing to do to the rest of us.

Call it lack of compassion on my part if you wish, but I'd just as soon none of us ever has to find out.

#20 — February 16, 2005 @ 18:08PM — Mike Kole [URL]

Now, how dare anybody badmouth the omnipotent FDA?! Let's get one thing straight: The FDA is a branch of the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, and therefore, always correct, never erring. Zoloft cannot possibly be the FDA's fault. It is impossible that the FDA would have winked at data, because they always do right. This has to be the solely the fault of a greedy pharmaceudical company.

At least, that's what so many people keep telling me.

#21 — February 16, 2005 @ 22:02PM — RJ [URL]

So, lemme get this straight.

A 12 year old can slaughter a few family members, commit arson, steal a car, and when he's caught, he's issued a "Get Out Of Jail Free Card" simply because he was on fucking Zoloft???

If he was on crack instead, which is obviously a more powerful drug, would your hearts bleed as much for this youthful murderer?

#22 — February 16, 2005 @ 23:22PM — Mike Kole [URL]

That's a good question you pose there, RJ, because then the big bad greedy pharmaceudical companies are out of the picture, and, the FDA isn't there to regulate crack.

#23 — February 16, 2005 @ 23:31PM — bhw [URL]

Lemme get this straight: you're equating the taking a medicine to treat a mental illness with the recreational use of an illegal drug?

I don't know if "Zoloft made him do it." I do know that he was already disturbed to be on Zoloft in the first place. I also know that he had recently been switched to Zoloft from another anti-depressant and that some young people actually have actually become suicidal AFTER starting to take Zoloft, rather than BEFORE. And that he was raised by an abusive father, who his grandfather had just threatened to return him to.

The kid shouldn't get away with murder. He should be tried as a KID and treated for his mental illness while he serves his time in the appropriate place for the appropriate length of time. There are a million mitigating circumstances in this case, which start with the key one that he was a fucking 12-year-old at the time of the crime.

#24 — February 16, 2005 @ 23:36PM — SFC SKI

I have to agree with BHW on this one.

If the suspect was an adult, I'd have a completely different take on this, though.

#25 — February 17, 2005 @ 00:59AM — bhw [URL]

SKI, I agree that the key factor is the kid's age. I also think that mental illness should factor into a jury's verdict with adults, as well, but that's another can of worms.

This jury has ignored ALL mitigating factors, which is astonishing and a very bad sign for our society.

As I originally said, we give our kids no freedom or responsibility in this country until they do something wrong. Then they're suddenly fit for treatment as an adult. Somehow, they've suddenly developed all the skills and faculties we've been telling them they don't have. So we only treat them as adults with the responsibilities of adults when they're in the court system. Outside of the court system, we need to protect them from SpongeBob music videos.

Makes no sense to me.

#26 — February 17, 2005 @ 12:43PM — Matt Schafer [URL]

"A 12 year old can slaughter a few family members, commit arson, steal a car, and when he's caught, he's issued a "Get Out Of Jail Free Card" simply because he was on fucking Zoloft???

If he was on crack instead, which is obviously a more powerful drug, would your hearts bleed as much for this youthful murderer?"

I think this is a pretty typical response from people who don't work with kids and don't understand developmental psychology. The short of it is that kids are screwed up. I was screwed up when I was a kid and so was everyone else.

When you take a motherless child with some emotional problems and over-medicate him what are we to expect?

I'm not saying we should hand him a get out of jail free card, but a 12 year old is not accountable for his actions the same way a 24 year old is, and never should have been tried as an adult.

#27 — February 17, 2005 @ 13:02PM — Al Barger [URL]

I'm not even concerned about some abstract idea of "justice" or "accountability" here. Nor do I care about his rough childhood.

What I DO care about is protecting the rest of us from this psycho. He's screwed up bad enough that he can never be trusted to be out amongst us ever, ever again.

I'm not real big on the death penalty, but it would be a mercy killing to take this kid out. He's already ruined, and not fit for society.

#28 — February 17, 2005 @ 14:15PM — bhw [URL]

Dr. Al, do me a favor. If you ever get called for jury duty, remember to answer every question posed to you with, "I'm not real big on the death penalty, but it would be a mercy killing to take this kid out. He's already ruined, and not fit for society."

That'll get you out of duty and maybe give some poor sod a chance at a fair trial.

Everybody wins!

#29 — February 17, 2005 @ 14:30PM — Al Barger [URL]

BHW, in what way would I not give a fair trial? If there was any doubt about his actual guilt, I'd be scrupulous in expecting proof.

Am I unfair to value the security of the whole community over looking for excuses to exonerate a psycho killer?

When Rose and Valerie screaming from the gallery eventually convince some judge to turn the excitable boy loose, we can all feel good about being fair and understanding. Not that this will do any good for the families of his next victims.

#30 — February 17, 2005 @ 14:34PM — Rodney Welch [URL]

What this boy did was unconscionable. That does not make him beyond redemption. Al's just wallowing in his own nihilism.

#31 — February 17, 2005 @ 14:51PM — Al Barger [URL]

Nihilism? What a load of crap. I'm not at all nihilistic.

I am, however, reality based. Your wishful thinking about "redemption" is all well and fine. It's possible that he'd straighten out and never act in a violent manner again. I'm just not willing to expose my people to him as some cheesy act of faith in someone who has shotgunned his own grandparents.

Perhaps we could release this boy into YOUR custody, Rodney. He could come stay with you or BHW, cause the little bitch ain't going to be welcome in Franklin County. We'll leave YOUR grandparents to babysit him.

#32 — February 17, 2005 @ 15:08PM — Eric Olsen

I heard a very convincing report saying that the brain simply isn't finished developing until around 14 - that nothing done before that age should ever be equated with the behavior and culpability of an adult. Try him as a mentally ill 12 year-old who committed heinous acts and treat accordingly - pretty simple and straightforward

#33 — February 17, 2005 @ 15:10PM — bhw [URL]

You're unfair, Al, because you would never consider any mitigating factors, which as a juror, you would be required to do. You dismiss all mitigating factors immediately. You're supposed to go in with an open mind about the evidence, and let's face it, yours is closed on this one.

And as for sending the kid to my house, I don't understand why you can't understand that I think he needs to be treated and rehabilitated: aka, he needs to be locked up while this happens.

He *will* be released some day. And my guess is that he'll come out worse than when he went in since he'll be in for so long and eventually among adults.

#34 — February 17, 2005 @ 15:14PM — Rodney Welch [URL]

Al, you'd have more fun killing him than I would raising him, that's for sure. Given the tone of your posts, I think you and this boy may have a lot in common in that regard.

Saying "He's already ruined, and not fit for society" is PURE nihilism. Who are you, Al? God? You can peer deep inside this kid's brain and say whether there's anything of value there? I don't trust your judgment. I think he ought to be punished, of course, and kept from society, but I'd prefer to leave your own fantasies locked safely inside your head.

#35 — February 17, 2005 @ 16:43PM — Al Barger [URL]

Yeah Rodney, bullshit on your cheap and patently dishonest ad hominem. I'd take no joy in killing anyone. Nonetheless, there are those who need to be put down like rabid dogs. There's no "fantasy" going on in my head.

The fantasy is your ridiculous expectation that I should put some kind of faith in the redemption of someone who shotgunned two of his grandparents and burnt the house down on them.

I don't care if there's anything you might deem to be of value in this boy, he's done screwed the pooch. There's no value this boy might someday show that's worth the obvious risk of him doing more of what he's already done.

It's a perfectly perverse liberal inversion of any idea of being connected to reality that the murderer is a poor, misunderstood victim while the people who don't want him let loose to do more damage become the bloodthirsty monsters.

#36 — February 17, 2005 @ 17:10PM — Rodney Welch [URL]

Which is it, Al? First you say it's a "mercy-killing" because he's irredeemable; now you say you don't care if he's redeemable.

I never said he was poor and misunderstood. I think he's completely wrong -- AND, keep in mind, I don't blame Zoloft at all. I hold to the view that the law should only be concerned with normal persons, and if most people who take Zoloft don't commit murder then we can't really blame the drug. I think the kid is totally, 100 percent at fault. I just don't believe in trying children as adults, or killing them, good as it might feel.

#37 — February 17, 2005 @ 17:41PM — Al Barger [URL]

I'm saying that I consider him irredeemable. He might have some good qualities, or perhaps develop some- but they won't be enough to justify the obvious risk of him doing more of what he's already done.

And again with the slander, accusing me of a bloodlust that I simply don't feel.

#38 — February 18, 2005 @ 01:03AM — RJ [URL]

"The short of it is that kids are screwed up. I was screwed up when I was a kid and so was everyone else."

Bingo. And yet I never slaughtered my own flesh and blood. Nor did I commit arson or steal any cars.

Because of this, I'm not in jail. And because this little punk DID commit those crimes listed above, he IS in jail...

#39 — February 18, 2005 @ 06:34AM — mrbenning [URL]

I don't think the kid should be put down, but I do find it interesting that, while he was tried as an adult, he wasn't given the death penalty.

#40 — February 18, 2005 @ 09:17AM — Rodney Welch [URL]

My immediate thought is to say that people respond to the idea of executing a teenage killer more in theory than in practice. But people have been executed in Christopher Pittman's home state -- which is also mine -- for horrendous crimes committed before they were adults. Despite pleas from the Pope and Jimmy Carter, a borderline retarded youth named James Terry Roach was executed in 1986 for his part in the rape and/or murder of a teenage couple in 1977, when he was 17. You can read his Supreme Court appeal for stay of execution here.

#41 — February 18, 2005 @ 09:23AM — Rodney Welch [URL]

Scratch that -- try this link.

#42 — February 18, 2005 @ 09:35AM — Eric Olsen

but 17 isn't 12 - that's the main issue here for me; as I mentioned before, studies show that the brain isn't fully developed until around 14 and until then it simply doesn't function like that of an adult. Add to that the mental illness, the Zoloft, which was prescribed, and trying and convicting him for this as an adult is a travesty

#43 — February 18, 2005 @ 09:38AM — Rodney Welch [URL]

I understand, Eric. I'm merely pointing out a precedent for anyone interested.

#44 — February 18, 2005 @ 09:43AM — Eric Olsen

I know - just restating my opinion of the whole thing. SOMETHING has to be done, obviously, and I don't care if they electroshock him for the next 20 years if that straightens him out and protects society, but trying him as an adult is simply contrary to reality and a glaring injustice.

#45 — February 20, 2005 @ 01:19AM — SRF

Who are we to judge? no one knows if this human being will or will not change, but we as a society need to help him and when we get to the root of where and why it not only helps the child it helps us to understand why a child would do this. He needs mental help not ADULT prison help.The TEN COMMANDMENTS say: shall not kill, and shall not commit adultry, so should we kill CLINTON also? Killing someone is NOT acceptable and I don't condone it, but I believe everyone deseves a chance to change, and to receive the appropriate help, and by putting a child in an adult prison is not helping anyone,he needs to be locked up but not with adults.

#46 — February 20, 2005 @ 08:57AM — mrbenning [URL]

"The TEN COMMANDMENTS say: shall not kill, and shall not commit adultry, so should we kill CLINTON also?"

There is a big difference between throwing the kid in prison and killing him.

"...he needs to be locked up but not with adults."

I agree with you there. I'm not sure where he's going to be, but I hope it's a maximum security prison because a 15 year old will surely end up fish food for the pirahnas anywhere else.

Just to throw some more evidence in, here's a few quotes from abcnews.go.com:

Prosecutor Barney Giese said the real motivation for the crime was the boy's anger at his grandparents for disciplining him for choking a younger student on a school bus. And he reminded jurors how the boy carried out the killings shooting his grandfather in the mouth and his grandmother in her head while both lay sleeping.

"I don't care how old he is. That is as malicious a killing a murder as you are ever going to find," the prosecutor said. He pointed to Pittman's statement to police in which he said his grandparents "deserved it."

Remember that I think the kid should be punished, but I also think an adult prison, at this point, would be a disasterous place and negate any chance of true rehabilitation.

#47 — February 20, 2005 @ 15:43PM — Angela Chen Shui [URL]

Thanks. Re-reading this early this morning triggered a blog entry and a 'review' here.

#48 — February 20, 2005 @ 15:54PM — Angela Chen Shui [URL]

Sorry. Wanted to link the above, but don't know how to from this comment section.

The review is at: http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/02/20/153505.php

#49 — February 20, 2005 @ 16:28PM — DrPat [URL]

Angela, your article is now linked.

#50 — February 22, 2005 @ 15:24PM — Angela Chen Shui [URL]

Thanks. :-)

#51 — February 22, 2005 @ 19:45PM — Ian

The kid obviously had problems from the reported abuse of his father and abandonment from his mother, both of which are factors that can severely affect the development of children, altering the child's conception of right and wrong. Locking him away for 30 years won't make it better. If he does get out, then he'd be a much worse person than he is now. He needs proper medical and psychological treatment, or at least an attempt at that before you can cast him off as "unsalvagable."

What he did was wrong, and while the drugs didn't kill his grandparents, the fact that he was 80 pounds (or so someone said), 12 years old, and taking a POWERFUL drug that wasn't indicated for people under 18, which has been known to cause suicidal tendencies and mania/hypomania... well, let's just say his state of mind could have been altered, so if he was angered and in a manic state, he would be less likely to be able to control himself.

Don't tell me that you're sure he would have been capable of doing this if he hadn't been prescribed the drug. I've taken two different prescriptions for treatment of depression, and I know they alter personalities. Greatly.

Basically, letting him go free or locking him up are two excessively simple resolutions to this issue. It's not so black and white, it never is.

#52 — August 11, 2005 @ 11:01AM — Bonnie

Al, you wouldn't know reality if it hit you in the face. Unmarried, childless, you are clueless about what it's like raising children, because you have none, you stand a typical know-it-all libertarian. You know less about 12 year-olds, and less about any of the facts of this case than you do about Skippy peanut butter. You're typical of people who know nothing about nothing and like making a lot of noise. Grow up and get a life. People like you are more dangerous than a 12 year old intoxicated with antidepressants and a loaded shotgun. Ever hear of Akathisia? It's what triggered the episode. He's not a psycho. Be quiet for once, read and listen, you man learn something that might actually turn you into a human being.
http://www.breggin.com/31-49.pdf
To learn more about the ChrisPittmanSupporters group, please visit
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ChrisPittmanSupporters


#53 — August 20, 2005 @ 22:53PM — Nancy

I wonder if the jury and the prosecuator has anything to say now that we have kid after kid killing parents, classmates, etc and mothers are strangling, drowning, killing, cutting up their own children, etc, after they have been put on psychotropic drugs. Granted not everyone does this, but it only takes one person to kill you or your child, doesn't it? If this young man would have been checked into a bit more thoroughly with the "slight possibility" that the drug may have induced the murders, think how many individuals would be still alive? Of course the drug companies wouldn't be as rich, but HEY...isn't this America? This is where money matters more than our children or the truth. The long arm of the FDA and the drug companies goes a long way, and they really don't care who gets in their way ... especially a young 15 year old boy.

#54 — August 31, 2005 @ 21:20PM — Janet

I just returned from a 3 day rally in Washington DC on the SSRI issues, and met many people with stories that you could not imagine. Ones that would leave you speechless.I met one of the kids from Columbine , he was shot 13 times and filed a lawsuit against pfizer on behalf of the boy that shot him and then killed himself. While there I was introduced to an internal document from the clincal trials by pfizer back in 1983, guess what folks they knew then that these drugs caused suicide and HOMOCIDAL tendencies in children , but did not release the information, This document was hand delivered to certain congressmen and now soon the truth will be coming out about these drugs.
Also while there I hand delivered a bill on juvenile justice reform putting protections in place for first offending children, one ammendment is that no child while under a mind altering prescription drug may be charged as an adult under mandatory sentencing guidelines please read this bill and petition , sign and pass it on if you agree.

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/429258617?ltl=1114901126

or google Christopher bill

#55 — December 8, 2005 @ 12:34PM — Melanie

Chris never denied the fact that he was guilty. I think that if we as American's do not have compassion, then what hope does this country have? Chris was 12 years old at the time of the crimes. Please visit the FDA web-site and read all about the thousands of other families whose lives have been demolished because of these drugs. It is astonishing that the public has not been made aware of the dangers. We are quick to condem a child, without all of the facts. The U.S. is the only country that has not acknowledged the dangers of these SSRI's. They not only cause suicide, but also homicide. Read up! Europe and Canada seem to care about their people, and not so much about how much money they are making. How many more people need to die before American's wake up? This is one small 12 year old...but there are many,many more. And we,as American's just sat back and watched as this 12 year-old's life was finished off. Next time it could be your child, and I'm sure that you'll appreciate all of the negative comments about locking them away forever. It will mean something then...it always does when it's your own child.

#56 — April 14, 2006 @ 20:26PM — Anne

IF the child had "been on crack" at the age of 12, at least there would have been no problem understanding that his sense of reality would have been distorted by a drug induced state of mind where anything appears real at the time, however illogical. What people would have thought of a 12 year old TAKING crack would be a different issue entirely. But the drug influence itself would not be under question.

Little Christopher Pittman though did NOT take crack. He was prescribed a drug that is chemically similar to, and can have the same effect as, cocaine but he took it not only because he was a child and even adults trust their doctors, but because he was prescribed it under the label of MEDICATION.

The last thing he needs is "treatment". He WAS 'treated' - with a substance that may as well have been crack and without having had that treatment we wouldn't be discussing him online because it wouldn't have happened.

Why is it so easy to blame the person given powerful mind altering drugs ....... and so hard to accept that JUST MAYBE these drugs are promoted and prescribed for another reason than the good of the recipient?

Could it be that those drugs make $ billions for the manufacturers and quite a lucrative amount for anyone else who will assist them in their promotion (from scientists and psychiatrists to teachers and reps - greed pays well and wanting 'more' is a failing we all give in to sometimes, but most of us not at the cost of the lives of others)?

Drugs that make even more for the manufacturers than 'illegal' mind altering drugs make for 'illegal' drug dealers?

Is it maybe because we as adults prefer to have access to hand for mind altering substances - despite our yelling to youngsters "JUST SAY NO TO DRUGS"?

Maybe its easier to justify our own weaknesses by blaming children for 'their' actions when those drugs cause havoc, in the same way as the illegal drugs would and do?

And why do we more harshly criticise children and expect more of them than of adults? Is that because by being harder on CHILDREN we can internally bury the fact that although we were once children, when we become adults we fail them so badly and so often? Rather like we fail the elderly in so many ways?
I found this today. Makes me wonder just who are the worst drug dealers in our society.

#57 — July 19, 2007 @ 21:41PM — jigger

Its two years later and for those who take the time to watch what happens we now have two years more information on the behaviour of drug companies. Two years more experience on non-disclosure of documents, two years more of watching pharma companies getting criminally indicted for off label promotion, hiding information etc.

Two years more of medications that were passed as safe being removed from the market. Two years more of black label warnings being put on drugs - mostly due to pressure and exposure being put on the FDA and drug companies by people who care about life and want the facts out in the open.

Two years of watching corruption, greed, lies, litigation.

And yet DESPITE these two additional years of knowledge and information - enough people are so uninformed that they do nothing to enforce scientific integrity, nothing to relate children like Christopher to DOCUMENTED side effects to ensure the protection of children, nothing to bring the corrupt (ADULTS) to justice, that this is still a problem.

The blame for it all lies on people, without the apathy, lack of understanding and lack of compassion of masses of people, the pharmaceutical industry, the industry psychiatrists, the regulators, could NOT carry on the farce as they do.

The results are their doing, but the fault lies with all of us who are can't be bothered to do anything to correct it or can't be bothered to use that brain to work it out.

How much is it going to take, how many suicides, homicides, cardiac arrests, diabetes onsets and various other adverse effects is it to take before THE PEOPLE stand up together and say STOP, which is the only thing that can and will stop it all?

Is it because so many people enjoy having legal mind altering drug easily accessible that they'd rather children die of physical side effects, or psychological side effects such as suicide or others get imprisoned for life due to drug induced homicide, than act like adults should and protect the young BEFORE our own wish for an easy drug way out?

Shame on us, the human race, top of the food chain and too lazy and self interested to protect our children from the bigger predators amongst us.

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/25546)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments