On Christmas Day, a stranger stabbed two tourists from Paraguay, 
both teenaged females, in Grand Central Terminal.
Like so many other random acts of street violence, this case 
illustrates the asymmetry in accountability between New York’s 
criminal-justice and mental-health systems.
About two weeks prior, the man accused of the stabbing, Steven 
Hutcherson, was released at a court hearing for a previous charge.
The mental-health system also failed the public and Hutcherson 
(whose ex said was schizophrenic and not on his meds). But there is 
no equivalent figure in that context to Judge Grieco. Mental health 
in New York is delivered via a sprawling network that blurs 
accountability between various private, federal, state and city 
agencies.
In lieu of assigning specific blame to someone within that system 
for the Grand Central stabbing, the incident should serve as a 
reminder of the need for systemic mental-health reform.
Such a reminder is timely as Albany lawmakers are poised to begin 
next year’s legislative session. The agenda already looks crowded. 
Mayor Adams’ political future is now imperiled by the migrant crisis 
and the escalating city-budget deficit. As he crafts his annual 
“ask” from Albany this session, need for state assistance with those 
challenges looms large. Mental health is at risk of being crowded 
out.
What state legislators need to do is pass the Supportive 
Interventions Act.
That bill is designed to enhance Adams’ ongoing initiative on 
involuntary psychiatric commitment. When back in November 2022, 
Adams announced a new direction on serious mental illness, he made 
two things clear.
One, no longer would city government wait to intervene with someone 
with untreated psychosis until after that person had attacked 
someone.
Two, the city could not deal with serious mental illness on its own. 
State action was needed.
The Supportive Interventions Act, filed by Queens Assemblyman Edward 
Braunstein, a Democrat, would support city efforts in a few ways. It 
would revise state commitment law to insulate the city against 
lawsuits, require clinicians to take someone’s treatment history 
into consideration when evaluating his or her likelihood to thrive 
outside the hospital environment and, upon discharge from hospital, 
consider eligibility for Kendra’s Law, New York’s highly effective 
mandatory outpatient-treatment program.
The legislation would also allow a broader range of mental-health 
professionals to conduct clinical evaluations for commitment.
On mental illness policy, Gov. Hochul thus far deserves a “B” thanks 
to her work on building back New York’s psychiatric bed supply. Also 
helpful, with respect to bed supply, have been efforts by Bronx Rep. 
Ritchie Torres to pass federal legislation that would greenlight the 
use of Medicaid for inpatient psychiatric treatment.
Yet New York not only needs more psych beds, but a hospitalization 
process with more integrity.
Cops complain that even when beds are available, hospitals discharge 
patients recklessly early. Getting more police buy-in has been the 
biggest city-level obstacle Adams has encountered in trying to 
expand involuntary commitment.
Theoretically, the commitment process would be handled from start to 
finish by mental-health clinicians. In practice, police must 
initiate the commitment process because of their presence on the 
streets and subways where the most appropriate candidates will be 
found.
More access to more effective psychiatric hospitalization, by means 
of state reforms, will help change many cops’ minds that it’s worth 
it to intervene early and take people in for evaluation.
It has become a cliché to speak of people like Steven Hutcherson as 
having “fallen through the cracks” of New York’s generously funded 
but ineffective mental-health system.
True mental-health policy reform, while broadly supported by the 
public, also always seems to fall through the cracks of a political 
process in which so many voices are demanding so many things from 
distracted politicians.
Maybe someday politicians won’t need to rely on random stabbing 
attacks on teenagers to remind them that New York’s mental-health 
system is a disgrace. Sadly, that day has yet to arrive.
Stephen Eide is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and 
author of a forthcoming report on correctional mental-health care.
https://nypost.com/2023/12/29/opinion/grand-central-tourist-
stabbing-shows-urgent-need-for-mental-health-action/