Rebecca Hall was tossed from a Baltimore hospital on a cold night. The viral video followed years of struggles. - The Washington Post
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She was tossed from a hospital on a cold night wearing only a gown. The viral video followed years of struggles.

April 13, 2018 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
Cheryl Chandler holds a photograph of her daughter, Rebecca Hall, at her home in Waldorf, Md. (Katherine Frey/The Washington Post)

Cheryl Chandler doesn’t remember her response to a viral video of her daughter being thrown out of a hospital on a cold night in Baltimore. A friend told her she screamed.

“I realized it was Rebecca,” Chandler said. “I couldn’t make my hands work to call someone.”

For viewers, the January video of 22-year-old Rebecca Hall being tossed out of the University of Maryland Medical Center wearing little more than a hospital gown was a troubling example of “patient dumping.” For Hall’s mother, however, it escalated an emergency — one she had lived through many times as her daughter’s mental health worsened.

Hall’s life can be measured in hospital stays and 911 calls. Chandler said she pleaded with hospital staff to commit her daughter, but pleas went unheeded. Privacy laws prevent caregivers from giving information or confirming whether patients were treated. Hall has a mental illness, but she is a mentally ill adult.

Chandler was in West Virginia when she saw the video. The Waldorf, Md., resident called the hospital, explaining she wasn’t a reporter, but the hospital tried to give her the email of a spokesman responding to news media inquiries.

Next, she tried the Baltimore Police Department. An officer said Hall had gone to a homeless shelter. The shelter wouldn’t tell Chandler if she was there, so she asked if an officer could check. The officer said the shelter wasn’t in his district and told her to call 911. Chandler explained she was out of state but did as instructed, and the operator sent her back to Baltimore police.

Imamu Baraka came to the aide of a woman discharged on Jan. 9 from a Baltimore hospital wearing only a gown and socks. Baraka recorded video of the incident. (Video: Facebook.com/imamu.baraka)

After additional calls and hours of worry, police confirmed that Hall was at the shelter. The next day, her family took her to another hospital, where she stayed until late March. She was sent back to her mother’s home for about two weeks, then ended up in another hospital this month, Chandler said, suffering from flashbacks from her time in Baltimore.

The latest hospitalization comes after much struggle. In the months before the video went viral, Chandler had embraced a new strategy for helping her daughter: not helping her.

He saw a dazed woman put out in the cold by a Baltimore hospital. He started filming.

“If I’m there, they’re more inclined to not do anything,” she said of Hall’s encounters with hospitals and law enforcement agencies. “If I’m there, they are less likely to do their job.”

An Asperger's diagnosis

She wasn’t like her fraternal twin sister, and wasn’t like other children, her mother said. She was quiet. She seemed to live in her own world. At Christmas, if she and her twin got dolls, Rebecca was more inclined to play with the box. One time, she twirled around the house for hours, captivated by a plastic hanger.

“It was concerning that there could be a cognitive issue,” Chandler said.

When Rebecca was 4 years old, she was diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome, a disorder on the autism spectrum. Still, for more than a decade, she thrived. She was held back three times in school, but attended the same one with her twin and had access to special education classes.

“Being a twin, you always have a best friend,” said Rosslyn Taylor, Hall’s twin. “She was always my best friend. We was always close when we were younger.”

But in the ninth grade, when Rebecca was 16, she began showing signs of depression and aggression. There were fights at school and suspensions. One day, though her teacher knew she couldn’t be asked questions in class, a substitute called on her — and a student called her “retarded.” This led to a melee during which the teacher got hit, and Rebecca was exiled to an external education program.

Around this time, Rebecca got another diagnosis: bipolar disorder with traits of schizoaffective disorder. Her behavior changed, too.

She would wander from the house. She would accuse family members of plotting to kill her, or talk about her upcoming trip to Mars, or explain that she had died and come back to life. When her oldest sister got pregnant, Rebecca became infatuated with her belly, and her sister would wake up to find Rebecca standing over her.

“When Rebecca is psychotic, she can be kind of scary,” Chandler said. “She was in need of a more secure, intense program. She needs someone with her.”

As children, Rosslyn shared a bedroom with Rebecca, and the twins had private jokes and secrets. They would have long conversations about their future, about whom they would marry. They planned to start families at the same time.

No more.

“I love her even more, but our relationship has been very difficult because it’s something you can’t control,” Taylor said.

After her diagnosis, Hall began taking medication and, for a few years, did well. She lived in a group home for the mentally ill in Charles County, Md., called Pathways, where she had her own apartment filled with stuffed animals and her artwork. She was working toward her GED and, for a time, had a job at Target as a cashier. She went to her mother’s home on weekends and for holidays.

In 2016, things started to fall apart.

“Rebecca realized she was an adult,” her mother said. “But she has the mentality of a preteen. . . . She wanted to be more like someone her age.”

Hall started making her own decisions, but they weren’t good ones. She started drinking and smoking marijuana. She dated other residents of Pathways. She stopped taking her medication, leading to more manic episodes and violent, paranoid behavior, her mother said. Once fastidious about her appearance, she stopped bathing and caring for her hair.

Such behavior wasn’t only out of character, her mother said, but it put Hall out of compliance with Pathways. After a few second chances, she was kicked out of the program on Christmas Eve 2016, weeks after walking her twin sister down the aisle at her wedding.

Pathways Executive Director Gerry McGloin said he could not acknowledge whether a particular person received services, but said Pathways works as an advocate for patients, and sometimes patients and families do not agree on what’s best. He said Pathways can only do so much for people with mental illnesses who refuse its services.

“They may decide to reject that help,” McGloin said. “And you’re trying to coax them back into care, but you may not be successful even then.”

Like Homer's 'Odyssey'

For Chandler, bringing Hall back home was a challenge. On disability herself, she had to arrange full-time care for her grown child at her Charles County home.

“I packed up her room, put it in a U-Haul and brought it up to my house,” Chandler said. “When the new year came, we started looking for services.”

If Chandler took her to a hospital during a manic episode, explaining that her daughter needed help, the hospital staff could ask Hall whether she promised to take her medication. If she agreed, she wouldn’t get admitted. After all, there was nothing physically wrong with her.

Chandler couldn’t understand it. Nurses would listen to Hall talk about extraterrestrial travel and insist there was nothing they could do for her.

Because of privacy laws, she couldn’t get basic information about her daughter, and was only able to get legal guardianship in March.

“The whole situation was like Homer’s ‘Odyssey,’ ” she said.

Howard University probing wheelchair ‘dump’ of hospital patient

Before she stopped taking her medication in 2016, Hall was hospitalized twice, her mother said. After she stopped, she went to the emergency room or was hospitalized about 10 times, and her mother called the police on her three times.

Police were as unwilling to intervene as the hospitals, Chandler said. Twice, they refused to take Hall to the emergency room. A third time, they took her to the hospital only after she tried to attack a police officer. It seemed like an endless cycle.

“If you don’t let me coordinate care for her, she’s going to end up homeless on the street,” she said she told a caregiver.

'In a mental state'

The last time Chandler saw her daughter before she turned up bloodied and half-naked outside UMMC was in October. A private case-management company called after one of Hall’s hospitalizations and asked Chandler to pick her up. She was manic, saying the staff wanted to rape and kill her. As Chandler drove her home, she kept raving.

To end the conflict, Chandler dropped her daughter off at a police station, where some officers were familiar with her situation.

Two weeks went by. In November, Chandler and Taylor, who was in town from Texas, got a call from Hall. She was in a group home, she said, but wouldn’t tell her family where. A woman who owned the group home also wouldn’t reveal the name of the home or its location.

“She would tell me ‘no,’ she didn’t want to tell me where she is,” Taylor said of such calls with her sister. “She wasn’t being malicious or anything. She was just in a mental state.”

A few weeks went by. Hall’s family didn’t hear from her. Even when manic, she usually stayed in touch — particularly with her twin.

In the middle of November, Chandler got a call from the case-management company. Did she know where her daughter was? Chandler didn’t. Why didn’t her case managers?

Chandler filed a missing- ­person report, even though she knew police couldn’t make her daughter return home. She later traced her daughter’s movements — or, at least, some of them. Only Hall knows the whole story.

Hall had gotten in touch with a former case manager who drove her to the Baltimore group home. Somehow, she ended up at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.

Her mother didn’t try to visit.

“Rebecca can give consent and within a matter of minutes withdraw consent and there’s nothing I can really do about that,” Chandler said. “There’s times I go to visit her in the hospital and I can’t get on the floor.”

The next time she saw her daughter, the world was seeing her, too. In a January video filmed by Imamu Baraka, a licensed counselor, Hall is seen being pushed out of the Baltimore hospital.

“So wait, y’all just going to leave this lady out here with no clothes on?” Baraka asks in the video.

What happened in the days before Hall arrived at UMMC isn’t clear. She would later tell her mother someone at the group home confiscated her belongings and phone, and she wasn’t permitted back into the home one night. At some point, she also went to the hospital to keep warm and “slept in tents with strangers,” Chandler said.

Hall’s plight was decried as a case of “patient dumping” — a hospital getting rid of people who, for financial or mental-health reasons, are difficult to treat. With few exceptions, the practice was outlawed in 1986.

But what looks immoral is not always illegal.

“There is certainly an ethical obligation to provide people with the best care available,” said Sophie Terp, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Southern California who has studied patient dumping. “One would hope that hospitals would ensure patients be discharged to a safe environment. However, there are circumstances, at times, in emergency departments where people are sometimes discharged after their medical complaints and conditions have been stabilized in a way that is somewhat abrupt.”

The hospital apologized, mounted an internal investigation and in March was cited by a federal regulator.

Hospital faulted by regulator after mentally ill, half-naked woman pushed into cold

There are a lot of people to be called to account in how her daughter was treated, Chandler said. There are hospitals, case managers and emergency responders who she says failed her. She has a lawyer and is contemplating a lawsuit against UMMC.

“Rebecca will be Rockefeller,” she said.

Then there is the army of trolls on social media. As much as Baraka’s video helped Hall receive quality treatment, it also made her a target. People made fun of her appearance and called her a junkie.

And then there is Baraka. Chandler feuded with Baraka after he posted the video of Hall on a GoFundMe page, created in 2016, where he says he is raising $250,000 for “the John F. Kennedy Community Counseling Center.” He says he plans to build the center in Baltimore to “serve the community as a teaching behavioral health center providing culturally sensitive counseling services,” according to the page, which has raised a bit more than $1,100 in about 18 months.

Baraka said he was not aware of a conflict with Chandler and pointed out that she thanked him for filming the video at a news conference in January. He also said he had planned to build the community center long before he shot the video.

“I don’t have a disagreement with them,” he said. “If they have one with me, you have to ask them about that.”

In the weeks since the video went viral, Hall and her family have tried to heal.

“I have a lot of hate toward the people who dehumanized her, embarrassed her, hurt her,” Taylor said. “I know Rebecca wouldn’t want me to do that. She wouldn’t want me to think that way. But it’s hard to think that people didn’t treat my sister like the beautiful human being she is.”

Alice Crites and Claritza Jimenez contributed to this report.

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