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Nakamura v. State9/26/2000 this care by Dr. Trockman, he admits, he had homicidal thoughts, "hearing voices," and believed that people in the television were talking to him and influencing his thoughts. He also believed that the United States military was developing a technology of controlling people's minds through what he called "harp (vibrational) technology."
[Nakamura] was diagnosed around July 1988 by Dr. Trockman as having "paranoid psychosis" because of hallucinations and ideas of reference. Dr. Trockman treated Mr. Nakamura with Prolixin and Stelazine, both anti-psychotic medications. Mr. Nakamura's care was discontinued by Dr. Trockman, and he was instructed to see Dr. Trockman on a PRN basis around May 4, 1989. During that time, Dr. Trockman took him off the anti-psychotic medications.
Mr. Nakamura gives a history of longstanding use and abuse of substances (e.g., alcohol -- "I was an alcoholic;" marijuana; LSD; and cocaine), reportedly since the 1970s and "cutting down but not stopping somewhere around 1986 because I got sick -- my liver was not doing too well." His last ingestion of cocaine and alcohol was about "two or three months ago."
The issue with IRS that got him into trouble was that he allegedly has not filed for his income taxes for about ten years. . . . He said that he could understand the IRS going after him for not paying his taxes but that what he cannot understand is that the IRS reportedly is "taking seventy-eight percent of my salary, and that is inhumane. How can anybody subsist on $185 every two weeks?"
He then went on to rant and rave that the IRS cannot do this constitutionally without his permission, and he is very angry at the state (University of Hawaii) for colluding with the IRS to do something that is not "constitutional."
[Nakamura] states that he is willing to go back to work only under two conditions: (1) That his wages are not garnished. (2) That he not work under the same foreman, either by "firing the foreman or transferring me elsewhere" (e.g., Kapiolani Community College). If the University is unwilling to concede his wishes, then, he states, he will consider legal action.
Mr. Nakamura states that this current incident has started "since Day One of my employment (April 1992)." He claims that he was verbally abused, threatened, and "set up to be criticized" by the first foreman[.] . . . This other foreman, however, according to him, was "worse than the first one, and this one was a nightmare." He then goes into the familiar catalog of complaints that he was called a liar and threatened with a beating-up. Because at that time he realized that jobs were scarce, he states that he just "took all the abuses" and did not complain. He states that when the IRS garnished his wages, that was the "last straw," and he filed an industrial injury claim.
His complaints against the foreman at the University of Hawaii were repeats of the troubles he got into at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard as well as Hickam Air Force Base and Bellows. He mentions the same pattern of abuse, verbal threats, and being "set up." When asked whether there was a possibility that there may have been something he was doing to provoke these reactions from the supervisors, he states that yes, there were, because, "I stand for what is right. I am not a trouble-maker. I just speak my mind, and they (the supervisors) cannot handle that." He keeps ranting and raving about the evilness and corruptness of the supervisors and does not consider at any time that he might be at fault.
He mentions being homicidal, but he takes great pains in explaining, "I'm a person who reacts to people's reactions. If I get threatened, then I fight back; but I
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