Suspect in
Doctor's Death Held Without Bond
Teen Accused of Killing Psychiatrist Is Mentally
Ill, Attorney Says
(September 6, 2006) -- The 19-year-old North Potomac man accused of fatally beating a prominent
doctor had been under psychiatric care for about six months but had not
acted violently before, his father said yesterday.
Albert Davydov said his family has "huge gratitude" for
slain
psychiatrist Wayne S. Fenton, who had agreed to treat his son, Vitali.
Fenton went "above and beyond what he was supposed to do," Davydov said,
adding that he wished there was something he could do to help the
psychiatrist's mourning family.
 Barry Helfand, attorney for Vitali Davydov, talks to the media with
Davydov's parents, Natalia and Albert. Davydov is charged with first-degree
murder. (By Melina Mara -- The Washington Post) |
|
Vitali A. Davydov is charged with first-degree murder in the killing of
Fenton, 53, who was beaten to death Sunday during a hastily arranged
appointment at which he tried to persuade the teenager to take his
medication for schizophrenia.
The teenager, dressed in a green prison jumpsuit, appeared yesterday via
closed-circuit camera from the county's main jail before Montgomery County
District Court Judge Gary L. Crawford, who ordered Davydov held without
bond. Toward the end of the bond hearing, while talking to his attorney over
the phone, Vitali Davydov was overheard saying, "My father did it."
Barry Helfand, the teenager's attorney, dismissed that claim. He said his
client is severely mentally ill and is "unable to appreciate where he is and
what's going on."
Authorities have provided few details about what might have triggered the
assault. Douglas Olson, 64, who lives near the crime scene, said Albert
Davydov, to whom he spoke at length while the two waited to give statements
to police, told him that his son had irrational delusions of being raped.
Helfand confirmed last night that the threat of rape "has been one of his
delusions" and that Davydov brought it up after being arrested.
Albert Davydov and his wife, Natalia, sat quietly in the front row of the
courtroom.
Helfand agreed with prosecutors that Davydov needs to be screened by
mental health experts. He will likely be evaluated at Clifton T. Perkins
Hospital Center, a state facility in Jessup where inmates are examined to
determine whether they are competent to stand trial. That could take a few
weeks.
If Davydov is found competent to stand trial, Helfand said, he intends to
enter a plea of not criminally responsible due to mental illness.
Helfand said he is also assessing the possibility of finding a private
psychiatric facility where Davydov could be held while he is evaluated.
Helfand said the county jail might not be the most suitable place to provide
Davydov with the treatment he needs.
Assistant State's Attorney Constantine Lizas said Montgomery prosecutors
would oppose that option because releasing Davydov from jail would pose a
threat to the community.
Davydov allegedly told detectives that he killed Fenton on Sunday
afternoon by beating him with his fists at the doctor's office in Bethesda.
Police said Davydov had argued with his father over the medication he had
been prescribed for what police described as "schizophrenia/bipolar
disorder" in a charging document.
Fenton, a highly regarded psychiatrist who had served as associate
director of the National Institute of Mental Health, had agreed to see
Davydov at 4 p.m. Sunday and told the teenager's father that he was going to
try to persuade Davydov to take the medication and perhaps accept an
injected dose.
Albert Davydov said yesterday that his son had seen "quite a few"
psychiatrists in recent months but had not behaved aggressively.
Albert Davydov called police after finding his son outside Fenton's
office on Old Georgetown Road. He noticed blood on his son's hands, shirt
and pants, police said. He then saw Fenton lying on the floor inside a
small, rear office of a private medical building. The father was unable to
enter because the door was locked, he said, and he shattered a window with a
rock. Moments later, paramedics arrived and broke down the door.
Vitali Davydov was charged in December with possession of marijuana and
carrying a concealed dangerous weapon after a traffic stop in Montgomery
Village. Those charges were dropped.
Source: Washington Post
Last updated: 09/06
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