Crime | Robert Allen Stanford Alleged Ponzi Schemer Judged Unfit to Stand Trial R. Allen Stanford 'mentally impaired,' judge decides By Rob Quinn Posted Jan 27, 2011 4:55 AM CST Copied Stanford still represents a flight risk and will have to undergo treatment within the prison system, the judge decided. (AP Photo/Pat Sullivan, file) Jailed Texas billionaire R. Allen Stanford is mentally impaired and incompetent to stand trial, a federal judge ruled yesterday. Psychiatrists testified that Stanford, who is accused of masterminding a $7 billion Ponzi scheme, is suffering from a major depressive disorder, an addiction to anti-anxiety medication, and a brain injury he suffered in a jail fight. Stanford's trial on securities fraud and money laundering charges will now likely be delayed until the second half of this year, the Wall Street Journal reports. The judge rejected a request for Stanford to be released so he could be treated at a private facility. He ordered that Stanford be sent to a federal prison medical facility for treatment, and suggested the Federal Medical Center in Butner, NC—part of the same complex that houses Bernard Madoff. Read These Next Online boo-bears go after the demo firm tearing White House apart. President Monroe's daughter wrote a desperate plea in 1839. Plane windshield partially shatters mid-flight. There's a suspect. 'Butt-breathing' could be the future for struggling patients. Report an error