From Deseret News archives:

Depressed over Prozac

Antidepressants dangerous and should be banned, crusader says

Published: Saturday, Aug. 21, 2004 11:53 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
The day after she heard that Brynn Hartman had shot her husband, comedian Phil Hartman, and then herself, Tracy called up Phil Hartman's brother, whose number she found on the Internet. Tracy had just returned from being an expert witness at the trial of a Wyoming woman on Paxil who had shot her husband and later reported that she didn't remember anything about the murder except standing there with the smoking gun. So Tracy told the Hartmans: "Don't you stop till you find one of these drugs." Brynn Hartman, it turned out, had been on Zoloft; drugmaker Pfizer settled an eventual wrongful death case for an undisclosed amount.

After reading about Mark Barton, the Atlanta day trader who killed his family and then drove to work and killed nine more people before also turning the gun on himself, Tracy phoned his mother. It wasn't until six months later that Atlanta police reported that Prozac had been found in Barton's car, so Tracy was operating on instinct when she urged Barton's mother to have his body tested for antidepressants. "Not all coroners check for these drugs," Tracy explains. "It requires a few extra tests, and not all states will pay for it. That's why you need to get to the families right away."

But things don't always work out the way Tracy would hope. In the Atlanta day trader case, she says, she had his body ready to be shipped to an independent forensic toxicologist in Oklahoma City, but Barton's mother changed her mind. Maybe, Tracy says, the coroner told Mrs. Barton that Tracy was a Scientologist.

Story continues below
The Scientology charge still surfaces occasionally, because Scientologists are famous for their opposition to psychotropic drugs and in fact to psychiatry in general. ("Psychiatry is seeking to create a world where man is reduced to a robotized or drugged, vegetablelike state so that he can be controlled," Church of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard once wrote.)

Vicki Cottrell, executive director of the Utah chapter of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI), is sure Tracy has Scientology ties. "She says she's not a Scientologist, but she has the same philosophy," says Cottrell. "Of course I don't have the thing on paper, in writing, but I believe they finance her." Tracy denies any connection to Scientology and says in fact that Scientologists don't like her because she won't go after psychiatrists. She says her war against antidepressants has put her $100,000 in debt (mostly from phone bills and publishing her book). Tracy accuses NAMI of getting money from drug companies.

Cause and effect

Emotions run high because, on both sides, there is a belief that lives are at stake. Mental-health advocates argue that antidepressants have helped millions of people, and they worry that crusades like Tracy's will convince the very people who need drugs to go off them. The stories of people who have committed suicide or crimes while on antidepressants are sad and regrettable, they agree, but anecdotes aren't scientific proof.

Recent comments

I have been taking zoloft for most of the last ten years. I have...

John Pack Lambert | Oct. 22, 2008 at 2:59 p.m.

re: "how do I get a copy of ann's tapes or cd's".

Be careful. I...

JIm | June 4, 2008 at 12:54 p.m.

how do it get a copy of ann's tapes or cd's. thank you

cindy | May 17, 2008 at 8:43 a.m.

Image

Ann Tracy is director of the International Coalition for Drug Awareness, which she runs from her home in West Jordan.

previousnext

Latest comments

so sorry to hear this terrible news..much sincer condolences to the her family.

Time for him to go. PAST time for him to go.

After reading many comments posted on several stories since the incident...

Hall reprimanded by MWC

Hey, I was at that Pres. Holland devotional, too. It was the year after the...

Sometimes when we loose we win, but not in this case. Want a future?...

First Meeting Utah, 12—4 (1896) Last Meeting BYU,...

Utahns growing tired of Bennett

I am!

Max Hall's only mistake was hating the sinner instead of the sin. He...

Kind of refreshing isn't it, Lee.

Philpot may run for Congress

I voted for Morgan for Vice Chair, and I think he would still be worth voting...

Advertisements