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Former child actor Tylor Chase has once again been left homeless on the streets of Riverside after a brief psychiatric hold ended without lasting support. Police say California law ties their hands, leaving advocates frustrated as viral footage and online debate highlight gaps in mental health intervention across the state today.
Why Tylor Chase’s Homeless Cycle Continues Under California Law
Per TMZ, Tylor Chase, best known for appearing on Ned’s Declassified, is once again sleeping outdoors in Riverside, despite clear concerns about his well-being. According to the Riverside Police Department, officers are aware that the former actor needs long-term mental health and substance abuse care, but the law limits what they can do.
Police spokesperson Ryan Railsback explained that Chase does not meet the legal threshold to be forced into treatment. He is neither deemed a danger to himself nor others nor considered gravely disabled. Even when authorities offer help, Chase reportedly declines and does so calmly, reinforcing the legal reality that homelessness itself is not a crime.
Advocates hoped a recent intervention might change his trajectory. Mighty Ducks star Shaun Weiss, who has been vocal about helping Chase, revealed that a mental health crisis team placed him on a 72-hour involuntary psychiatric hold. However, Chase was released once the hold expired and returned to the streets.
A video later surfaced showing him asleep on a building stoop, underscoring how temporary interventions have failed to produce lasting change.
Railsback added that even if Chase were arrested for drug possession or paraphernalia, such offenses would be misdemeanors, leading to a quick release. As he bluntly put it, “We can’t kidnap him.”
Social Media Reacts as Viral Post Sparks Outrage on X
The situation gained renewed attention after a widely shared post on X circulated footage of Chase back on the streets. Many users expressed anger and heartbreak, criticizing a system that cycles vulnerable people through short holds without follow-up care.
One commenter, @cee_au, posted:
It’s weird that a state govt could force young people to get a Covid shot, but can’t force drug addicted or mentally ill people to get treatment.
Another commenter suggested that the psychiatric hold was only a start:
The ’72-hour’ hold meant to be a start, not the end. ‘released early and no one contacted’ is the system failing. wild.
Others debated personal freedom versus state intervention, questioning whether current laws truly protect those in crisis.







