His escape was brilliant and shall be filed away for future reference if
needed:  "Terrance felt he was being held against his will. So he came up
with a plan. “I told them I was calling my insurance company and canceling
my insurance.”

They released him immediately."

-------------
Max
Charleston SC

On Thu, May 4, 2017 at 11:25 AM, Mitch Haley via Mercedes <
mercedes@okiebenz.com> wrote:

>
> If true, this part reveals a truly frightening scam:
>
> At one point, he met a friend for breakfast and had what he thought at the
> time was a panic attack, but what he now believes was a seizure caused by
> low blood sugar. His friend brought him home first so Terrance could take
> some anxiety medication. But that didn’t work, so his friend brought him to
> the ER.
>
> When they asked Terrance if he had suicidal thoughts, he answered
> truthfully and plainly: of course he thought about suicide, but he didn’t
> have any serious plans to do it. The personnel at the ER reacted swiftly.
>
> “They put me on a 72-hour psych hold and sent me to a psychiatric
> hospital, which I’ll tell you is much worse than prison. They don’t want
> you to leave,” Terrance told me. “If you have good insurance, they want to
> keep you there. So after my 72-hour hold was up, they asked me to commit
> myself voluntarily. And when I refused to do that, they got a judge’s order
> to keep me locked up.”
>
> Terrance felt he was being held against his will. So he came up with a
> plan. “I told them I was calling my insurance company and canceling my
> insurance.”
>
> They released him immediately.
>
>
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