“…A considerable number of researchers have found that participation in these problem-solving courts reduces criminal recidivism (Herinckx, Swart, Ama, Dolezal, & King, 2005; Hiday, Wales, & Ray, 2013; Steadman, Redlich, Callahan, Robbins, & Vesselinov, 2011). In general, MHCs hold that psychiatric symptoms influence the criminal behavior of individuals with mental illness (Reich, Picard-Fritsche, Lebron, & Hahn, 2015), and that lack of, or inadequate, psychiatric care leads to criminal involvement (Lurigio & Snowden, 2009). However, the broader criminal justice literature suggests that factors associated with increased recidivism risk for the general population are more useful for predicting recidivism among individuals with mental illness than are psychiatric symptoms (Junginger, Claypoole, Laygo, & Crisanti, 2006; Skeem, Winter, Kennealy, Louden, & Tatar, 2014), and that there is generally not a direct causal pathway between mental illness and criminality (Peterson, Skeem, Hart, Vidal, & Keith, 2010).…”