Begin With a Consultation
What These Services Are For

Forensic evaluations are not therapy. They are designed to answer a specific referral question, produce focused clinical documentation, or support a defined legal or professional purpose.

Chris Johns has served as a Court Representative for over a decade, conducting more than 375 court-related mental health assessments. His forensic work spans guardianship, conservatorship, capacity questions, risk considerations, behavioral functioning, and trauma-informed clinical analysis.

Not every inquiry results in accepted services. Each request is reviewed individually before a commitment is made.

Who May Inquire

These services may be appropriate for:

  • Attorneys
  • Courts
  • Agencies and referral sources
  • Individuals with a defined clinical documentation need

Each inquiry is reviewed for scope, clinical appropriateness, and availability before services are accepted.

Common Questions

FAQ -- Forensic Evaluations

No. A forensic evaluation is a separate service with a different purpose. A forensic evaluation is designed to answer a specific referral question and to produce documentation for legal or professional purposes. The two services do not overlap and are not interchangeable.

No. Each request is reviewed individually before services are accepted. Availability, scope, timeline, documentation requirements, and clinical appropriateness are all considered. If a referral is outside the practice's scope or capacity, we will communicate that directly.

Contact the practice directly and include the referral question, the requesting party's role, relevant documentation or court orders, and your required timeline. A member of the practice will follow up to discuss next steps.