True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
For nearly two decades, Rob and Michele Reiner pursued every available avenue to address their son's addiction and mental illness — repeated treatment programs, financial support, proximity, and access to leading clinical resources. The night before they died, they brought Nick to a holiday gathering specifically to keep him under observation. The legal and structural reasons they had no other option are the subject of this retrospective. Under current law, the bar for compelling an adult into involuntary treatment is deliberately high, generally requiring a demonstrable, imminent danger to self or others. Short of that threshold, families retain no authority to mandate care regardless of severity, history, or risk. This look back examines where the matter stood at the time of our reporting and situates it within the broader policy landscape: the deinstitutionalization movement that reduced psychiatric hospital capacity, the resulting shift of acute mental illness into the correctional system, and the limited statutory tools available to families navigating a relative in crisis. It also addresses a documented and difficult element of this case — that the family, at one stage, declined professional guidance regarding their son's behavior. The segment treats that decision not as a verdict on the individuals involved but as an illustration of how addiction alters family decision-making, and how a system oriented toward liability management rather than treatment outcomes leaves even well-resourced families with few meaningful options. #RobReiner #NickReiner #MicheleSingerReiner #InvoluntaryTreatment #MentalHealthPolicy #Deinstitutionalization #TrueCrime #Addiction #SystemFailure #HiddenKillers
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