Abstract
Occasionally, psychiatric patients detained in institutions against their will or residing in the community under legal restraints elope and commit serious offenses. The authors looked at the frequency with which this occurred with patients on warrants of the Lieutenant-Governor in Ontario. Using the files of the Ontario Lieutenant-Governor's Board of Review, they examined the records and isolated such recorded incidents over a 16 year period. In spite of the limitations identified by the authors, their findings indicate a lower than expected occurrence. As well, they point to the risk management implications of certain diagnostic groups being treated in a less than secure setting.
