Scott Jeffery Schutzman, who changed his name to Starson and preferred to be called "Professor", obtained an
electrical engineering degree and held a strong interest in physics (although it was not his profession). He was diagnosed with
bipolar disorder. He appreciated that he was not 'normal' and that he had problems dealing with people. He acknowledged that he had mental health issues, but he refused to accept his condition as an illness. He also refused to consent to the course of medications that his physicians recommended for fear that it would diminish his thinking. He would have accepted
psychotherapy but no medication. Dr. Ian Gary Swayze, who was not Starson's primary doctor but who had reviewed his medical charts, testified first. "[T]his charting is ominous. It would suggest to me a chronic, unremitting course which likely would be a future for Professor Starson, should he not receive treatment," Swayze testified. On December 24, 1998, Swayze declared Starson incapable of consenting to proposed psychiatric treatment and should therefore be involuntarily medicated as directed. Starson applied to the Consent and Capacity Board for a review of this decision. The Board decided that, because Starson did not recognize that he was ill and that he needed treatment, Starson was not able to understand the consequences of
consent; he failed to appreciate the risks and the benefits and therefore he lacked the capacity to make a decision as to treatment. Starson was subsequently charged multiple times with uttering death threats and has spent most of his later life in institutions. == Case ==