When Civil Liberties Collide with Survival with special guest Mark Astor
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A parent’s most frightening moment is realising love alone will not stop a spiral. When substance use disorder and mental illness collide, families get pushed into a world of crisis calls, involuntary holds, court filings, and treatment programmes that do not always communicate or cooperate. We sit down with Florida attorney Mark Astor, who leads a mental health and addiction law practice built around one goal: saving families when a loved one cannot or will not choose help.
We get specific about the tools people search for late at night: the Marchman Act in Florida for involuntary substance abuse assessment and treatment, the Baker Act for acute mental health crises, and the limits of guardianship and conservatorship when you still cannot find a bed or physically get someone to care. Mark explains why “30 days and done” is a dangerous myth, how relapse prevention depends on daily recovery work, and why enforceability is the hinge that determines whether a court order changes anything at all. We also unpack the hard civil liberties questions, the county-by-county reality of different judges, and what happens when mental health systems become a black box with limited oversight.
If you’re a parent, partner, or advocate trying to navigate crisis intervention, outpatient commitment, HIPAA barriers, and cross-state guardianship problems, this conversation will give you clearer expectations and a better vocabulary for asking the right questions. Subscribe for part two, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with the biggest system gap you want fixed.
Mark, an attorney since 1994, was born and raised in the UK and began his legal career as a Palm Beach County Assistant State Attorney before entering private practice. He served as Chief of two County Court Divisions and later worked in a felony trial division, handling thousands of cases from misdemeanors to capital murder.
Admitted to the Florida Bar in 1994, Mark later gained admission to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida (1995), the District of Columbia Bar (2005), and the Massachusetts Bar (2022), where he opened a Boston office. Mark holds a BA from the University of Michigan (1990), a JD from Nova Southeastern University (1994), and an LLM from American University (2005).
In 2016, Mark founded Drug and Alcohol Attorneys, a service for individuals and families affected by substance abuse and mental health disorders. In 2017, he co-founded Astor Simovitch Law with his wife, Audra Simovitch, a firm dedicated to saving families whose loved ones are suffering from substance use, mental health disorders, and failed attempts at recovery. In 2020, he founded Baker Act Attorneys, advocating for individuals wrongfully detained in the State of Florida’s mental health system. Mark has successfully litigated against hospitals and facilities violating rights under the statute and is known for his relentless commitment to securing releases, day or
night.
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