In Your State

Laura's Legacy

thumb_laurapictureOn January 10, 2001, our daughter, Laura, was at work at California's Nevada County Behavioral Health clinic.  A client appeared for a scheduled appointment. Without warning or provocation, he drew a handgun and shot Laura four times. When the rampage at the clinic and at a nearby restaurant ended, Laura and two others lay dead, and three were injured.

California passed Laura’s Law to help make sure the same thing doesn’t happen to another family.  Laura was at the clinic that day to help. 

We’re asking for you help to bring Laura’s Law to your county and help save lives.

--Amanda and Nick Wilcox

San Francisco Needs Laura's Law Now

Each day someone in San Francisco who is suffering with a mental illness goes untreated.  They aren’t receiving care because too often the law stands in the way.  By enacting Laura’s Law Now, San Francisco can remove some of the barriers that stand between illness and recovery. 

Current laws do not allow many people suffering from a severe mental illness to receive the treatment they need until its too late.  The results are tragic – each year hundreds of people with untreated mental illness in San Francisco suffer homelessness, suicide, victimization, criminalization and repeated hospitalizations.   San Francisco's failure to treat severe mental illnesses threatens the health and safety of people with the diseases and those around them. 

You can help by becoming an advocate!

You can help restore reason to treating mental illness in San Francisco today.  Be part of the California Treatment Advocacy Coalition in urging the San Francisco Board of Supervisors to enact Laura’s Law Now.   This law will allow people with severe mental illnesses who need assisted outpatient treatment to receive the help they need in a timely manner.  Laura’s Law will offer assisted outpatient treatment as an option for people who are unable to seek treatment on their own.

Educate Yourself and Others

Writing a letter to the editor for your local newspaper can help spread the word.

Become familiar with Laura's Law and assisted outpatient treatment in order to become a more effective advocate.

  • Laura’s Law will reduce hospitalizations.
  • Laura’s Law will reduce homelessness.
  • Laura’s Law will reduce arrests.
  • Laura’s Law will reduce victimization and violence.    
  • Laura’s Law will improve treatment compliance.