Showing posts with label insanity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label insanity. Show all posts

Thursday, June 2, 2022

President Reagan's would-be assassin John Hinckley released unconditionally

US District Court Judge Paul L. Friedman granted John Hinckley, the man who shot President Ronald Reagan in 1981, freedom from all his remaining restrictions, reported Jurist.

This unconditional release occurs 41 years after Hinckley’s assassination attempt on President Reagan. In September Judge Friedman stated his intent to release Hinckley from his remaining release restrictions on June 15 as long as Hinckley behaved well. At hearing hearing Judge Friedman confirmed “Hinckley has continued to do well,” and therefore granted his unconditional release which will take effect later this month.

After Hinckley attempted to assassinate President Reagan, he was found not guilty by reason of insanity at trial but has since received mental health treatment. Hinckley was sent to a Washington D.C. mental hospital for treatment but since 2016 has resided in Virginia.

Prosecutor Kacie Weston stated during Hinckley’s court hearing that this case “has demonstrated the success that can come from a wraparound mental health system.” Additionally, she wished Hinckley “success for both his sake as well as the safety of the community.”

After the hearing, Hinckley’s lawyer Barry Levine said Hinkley worked hard “to correct something that he was unable to erase, and this is the best outcome that one could imagine.”

To read more CLICK HERE

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

SCOTUS rules states not required to offer traditional insanity defense

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the due process clause doesn’t require states to offer a traditional insanity defense based on a defendant’s inability to distinguish right from wrong, reported the ABA Journal.
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in the case of Kansas death row inmate James Kraig Kahler, who was convicted of killing four family members in 2009. Justice Elena Kagan wrote the majority opinion, joined by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito Jr., Neil M. Gorsuch and Brett M. Kavanaugh.
In Kansas, a defendant can invoke mental illness to show he lacked the required mental state that is a required element of the crime. A defendant can also raise any kind of mental illness after conviction to seek a lower prison term or commitment to a mental health facility.
Kansas is among a handful of states that don’t recognize the traditional insanity defense that provides for acquittal when a mentally ill defendant is unable to distinguish right from wrong.
A mentally ill defendant in Kansas who was able to form the intent to kill, even if he or she believed the murder was morally justified, would be convicted, Kagan said.
That means a defendant in Kansas who killed someone because he believed God had ordained the sacrifice would be convicted, Kagan wrote in her opinion. But a defendant who didn’t understand the function of a gun or the consequences of its use would be acquitted in a fatal shooting.
Kahler had argued that the traditional insanity test was so rooted in the common law that it could not be jettisoned. Kagan disagreed. “No insanity rule in this country’s heritage or history was ever so settled as to tie a state’s hands centuries later,” she wrote.
“Contrary to Kahler’s view, Kansas takes account of mental health at both trial and sentencing. It has just not adopted the particular insanity defense Kahler would like. That choice is for Kansas to make—and, if it wishes, to remake and remake again as the future unfolds.”
Justice Stephen G. Breyer said the traditional insanity defense was rooted in “700 years of Anglo-American legal history” and Kansas could not constitutionally eliminate any inquiry into the blameworthiness of the defendant. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor joined the dissent.
Breyer offered his own example to illustrate the Kansas law.
“In Prosecution One,” Breyer wrote, “the accused person has shot and killed another person. The evidence at trial proves that, as a result of severe mental illness, he thought the victim was a dog. Prosecution Two is similar but for one thing: The evidence at trial proves that, as a result of severe mental illness, the defendant thought that a dog ordered him to kill the victim.
“Under the insanity defense as traditionally understood, the government cannot convict either defendant. Under Kansas’ rule, it can convict the second but not the first.”
The ABA said in an amicus brief that it supported the traditional insanity defense.
To read more CLICK HERE

Monday, September 2, 2019

GateHouse: A preview of the upcoming SCOTUS term

Matthew T. Mangino
GateHouse Media
August 31, 2019
You can feel it in the air. The lines are drawn, old rivals prepare for battle, and fans wait in line to get in for opening day. No, it is not the first Sunday of NFL football — it’s the approaching first day of the fall term of the United State Supreme Court (SCOTUS).
If you’re a SCOTUS fan, particularly decisions impacting the criminal justice system, this term is going to be a real treat. The justices will hear a litany of cases dealing with everything from the insanity defense to the death penalty.
First, the court will consider the insanity defense. The insanity defense is not a justification for committing a crime — like self-defense — it is an excuse for committing a crime. The defendant admits the crime, but asserts a lack of culpability based on a severe mental illness.
Several years ago, Kansas abolished the insanity defense. There are only three other states without the insanity defense.
James Kahler was charged with murder in Kansas. His attorneys argued to the jury that their client wasn’t guilty because he was unable to appreciate the difference between right and wrong when he committed murder.
Without a recognized defense for insanity, Kahler was convicted. His case has made its way to the Supreme Court where it will be argued this fall.
To get to this point, his lawyers argued that Kansas’ approach “defies a fundamental, centuries-old precept of our legal system: People cannot be punished for crimes for which they are not morally culpable.”
In a second case out of Kansas, the high court will decide whether, for purposes of an investigative stop by police under the Fourth Amendment, it is reasonable for an officer to suspect that the registered owner of a vehicle is the one driving the vehicle absent any information to the contrary.
Next, the death penalty. James McKinney was sentenced to death by a judge in Arizona. Following years of appeals, a federal appeals court ruled that the Arizona courts erred by not considering mitigating evidence during his sentencing, and ordered the state to reconsider the sentence.
Since McKinney’s first sentencing, the law changed requiring a jury, not a judge, to impose a death sentence. However, the Arizona court said because the law was different when he was first sentenced, McKinney should again be sentenced by only a judge.
McKinney is asking the Supreme Court to affirm his constitutional right to be sentenced by a jury. The court’s decision will impact a number of states since there is disagreement among the various state courts on this issue.
There is another case that has generated some interest--not only because of who is involved--but because of the potential impact on juvenile life sentences. Lee Boyd Malvo rose to infamy in 2002 when he and John Allen Mohammad went on a 21-day sniper spree that killed 10 motorists in the Washington, D.C., area.
Malvo was 17 when he committed the offenses, which led to a sentence of life without parole. After he was sentenced, the Supreme Court decided Miller v. Alabama. The court ruled in Miller that the Eighth Amendment prohibits sentencing a juvenile to a mandatory sentence of life without parole.
Virginia, where Malvo was sentenced, has argued that Malvo’s sentence of life without parole was not mandatory because Virginia law permits judges to suspend a life sentence. The Supreme Court must decide whether Miller applies to a sentencing scheme like Virginia’s that doesn’t “officially” impose a mandatory life without parole sentence.
Finally, in a case out of Louisiana, the Court will decide if the Constitution requires unanimous jury verdicts in all state criminal trials, as occurs in 49 out of 50 states?
Although Louisiana revised its state constitution to require unanimous verdicts—Oregon is now the only state that allows non-unanimous verdicts in criminal cases—the change came after Evangelisto Ramos was convicted of murder by only 10 of 12 jurors. Ramos wants the benefit of the new law.
SCOTUS, like the NFL, has a busy schedule this fall, but don’t look for any SCOTUS outcomes until after the Super Bowl.
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book The Executioner’s Toll, 2010 was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter @MatthewTMangino.
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Sunday, April 21, 2019

Lawmakers consider banning death penalty for seriously mentally ill

Lawmakers around the country are considering bans on death sentences for people with certain serious mental illnesses, reported The Marshall Project. Earlier this year, the South Dakota state legislature rejected a proposal to ban death sentences for people with serious mental illnesses, though it had passed such a proposal through one chamber last year
The Virginia state senate approved a similar bill three months ago. Other bills are gaining traction in TexasOhioTennessee and Missouri. Some include post-traumatic stress disorder, while others are limited to schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and bipolar disorder. Many require active psychosis at the time of the crime. Some would let a judge decide who should be exempted, before the trial begins. The Texas bill would let a jury decide during the trial. The Tennessee bill requires a documented medical history before the crime, which might exclude someone like Otto.
Supporters of these bills, with the backing of the American Bar Association, argue that the “insanity defense” tends to be very narrowly defined, and juries are skeptical of it. The Supreme Court has already banned the death penalty for people with intellectual disabilities and those who committed their crimes before the age of 18. Both bans were based on the idea that society views these murderers as “categorically less culpable than the average criminal.” The high court has ruled that death row prisoners must be “competent” to be executed, though lower courts are still debating exactly what that means.
“Defendants who have a mental illness are particularly vulnerable in our criminal justice system,” Amanda Marzullo, director of the Texas Defender Service, told a panel of legislators in her state last month. “They are very likely to fire their defense lawyers, or not cooperate with them, or even try to represent themselves.”
Prosecutors have been wary. “The version of this legislation that is pending in Ohio would effectively end the death penalty,” said Louis Tobin, executive director of the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association. He predicted that everyone facing the punishment would be able to obtain a diagnosis. A defendant can already mount an insanity defense, he pointed out, and then tell the jury about mental illness as a way of persuading them to vote for life without parole instead of death. Ohio’s bill, as of now, would apply retroactively, potentially setting up lengthy legal fights over old cases.
To read more CLICK HERE


Monday, March 25, 2019

SCOTUS to review insanity defense under Eighth Amendment

The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to decide whether the Constitution prevents the state of Kansas from curtailing the insanity defense.
The court accepted the case of Kansas death-row inmate James Kraig Kahler, who was convicted of killing four family members in 2009. The cert petition argues Kansas can’t curtail the insanity defense under the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment and the 14th Amendment’s due process clause.
The Kansas insanity law, adopted in 1996, provides that mental disease or defect is not a defense unless it negates a required element of the crime, such as intent to commit murder. Under the 1996 law, inability to know right from wrong is not a defense to a crime, the cert petition says.
“Even a capital murder defendant need not be of sound mind” to be convicted, the petition says. “So long as he knowingly killed a human being—even if he did it because he believed the devil told him to, or because a delusion convinced him that his victim was trying to kill him, or because he lacked the ability to control his actions—he is guilty.”
Kahler was so depressed at the time of the crime that he was disassociated from reality, according to the cert petition. “Although he knew that he was shooting at human beings,” the cert petition says, “his mental state was so disturbed at the time that he was unable to control his actions.”
Kansas is one of five states that do not permit a defendant to assert as a defense that mental illness prevented him from knowing his actions were wrong, according to the cert petition. The other states are Alaska, Idaho, Montana, and Utah.
Before Kansas adopted its current insanity rule in 1996, it had applied the more liberal M’Naghten rule. It provides that a defendant is not criminally responsible if he does not know right from wrong, or if he doesn’t know the nature and quality of his act.
SCOTUSblog notes the cert grant and links to the cert petition, while the Topeka Capital-Journal has February 2018 coverage of the Kansas Supreme Court decision upholding Kahler’s conviction.


Friday, March 22, 2019

Criminal justice cases headed for the Supreme Court

This week, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari in four new criminal-justice cases. Garrett Epps of the University of Baltimore, writing for The Atlantic outlines the four cases:
  • Whether a state can make it a state crime for an undocumented immigrant to use a stolen Social Security number that has been used to find a job;
  • Whether a state can simply abolish the insanity defense in criminal cases;
  • Whether a state jury can convict a criminal defendant by a vote of 11–1 or 10–2, rather than unanimously; and
  • Whether Lee Boyd Malvo, one of the most infamous multiple murderers in American history, must receive a new sentencing hearing because he was a juvenile at the time he participated in the Beltway sniper attacks that left 10 people dead in 2002.
Let’s start with the immigration-crime case. Kansas v. Garcia is a test of statutory language in the Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) of 1986, the last truly comprehensive immigration-reform statute. Among its other effects, IRCA is why, when employees begin a new job, they must file a federal I-9 form attesting that they are American citizens—and attaching documents such as a birth certificate or passport to prove that the attestation is true.
The three defendants in Garcia are undocumented immigrants. They used other people’s Social Security numbers on I-9s when they found work in Kansas, as well as on Kansas state documents required to file taxes or rent housing. Kansas authorities prosecuted all three under state “identity theft” statutes that prohibit use of the documents or identifying numbers of another person to commit fraud or “obtain any benefit.”
At trial, the defendants pointed to the section of IRCA that imposed the I-9 requirement. That section says that the I-9 form, and “any information contained in or appended to such form,” can be used only to enforce specified federal crimes. That meant, they argued, that federal law “preempts” state laws seeking to punish any use of the “information” provided by a worker, even if false. The state’s response was that the language covers only use of the information on an I-9 form itself; it can’t, Kansas said, be read to immunize a worker who uses the same information on a separate form to pay state taxes, gain a driver’s license, or do other business with the state.
Federal preemption is a dense subject. Congress has certain enumerated powers under the Constitution. When passing laws under those powers, it may take specific areas out of state jurisdiction altogether. It does this by saying, “This law preempts state law” (explicit preemption), or by passing a statutory scheme that either directly conflicts with a state statute or is so comprehensive that it “occupies the field” (“implied preemption”). The Kansas Supreme Court concluded that IRCA explicitly forbids states to penalize the use of the same information. That reading isn’t nonsensical; one purpose of IRCA was to make it easier for undocumented immigrants to comply with the law without fearing prosecution. In its appeal to the Supreme Court, however, Kansas points to language in the same section of IRCA that says the statute preempts all state laws punishing employers for any errors on their workers’ I-9 forms. That language, Kansas argues, omits state or local laws punishing the employees themselves.
The U.S. government has filed an amicus brief asking the Court not to find “explicit preemption” in the statute’s language. That reading, it argues, makes no sense: “On respondents’ logic, Kansas could prosecute a U.S. citizen who presents a stolen driver’s license for identity theft even if he also appended that stolen license to his I-9, but a state prosecution of an unauthorized alien in the same position would be expressly preempted.” It asks the Court to go further and hold that the IRCA section doesn’t “implicitly” preempt state laws either, and to avoid any broad constitutional ruling on federal immigration power and state law.
The stakes in the case are fairly high; a green light for this statute would create pressure to pass similar statutes elsewhere.
Kahler v. Kansas also concerns a Kansas statute—one that in essence abolished the age-old “insanity defense” to a criminal charge. For more than half a millennium, English and American courts have held that “insanity” (now a legal, not medical, term) negated a defendant’s criminal responsibility; by the 19th century, that term had been defined as a mental disease that rendered the defendant either unable to understand “the nature and quality” of what he was doing (thinking the victims were actually haystacks rather than humans, for example) or unable to discern that his actions were wrong. (Some courts used to explain this prong by saying that if defendants would still have committed the crime with a police officer standing nearby, they were legally insane—if not, not.)
That defense fell into some popular disrepute after John W. Hinckley, who attempted to assassinate President Ronald Reagan in 1981, was acquitted for reasons of insanity. Since then, legislatures have experimented with ways of cutting back on the traditional rule. Kansas went further than most. In 1996, its legislature passed a law eliminating the defense entirely—unless the defendant was able to show that he or she was so mentally impaired as to be unable to form the “mental state” necessary to violate the law. A defendant unable to form the “intention” to kill could not be convicted, but one who could “intend” to shoot or kill could be, regardless of how distorted the subjective reasons for doing so.
James K. Kahler, the petitioner in this case, went to his ex-wife’s grandmother’s house on Thanksgiving 2009 and killed the grandmother, his ex-wife, and the couple’s two daughters. At trial, his lawyers offered evidence that he was suffering from major depressive and obsessive-compulsive disorders, among others. A defense expert testified that Kahler “felt compelled” to kill and was, for that period, “completely out of control.”
That defense might or might not have satisfied a jury under the old statute, but in Kahler’s case, the jury was permitted to decide only whether Kahler had the intent to kill; they concluded he did and sentenced him to death. The state supreme court rejected his constitutional challenge to the insanity law. Now his lawyers ask the Court to hold that blocking a traditional insanity defense violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on “cruel and unusual” punishment.
Besides Kansas, three other states—Idaho, Montana, and Utah—have abolished the insanity defense completely; a fourth, Alaska, has truncated the defense so as to allow conviction even if a defendant didn’t understand right from wrong at the time of the crime. In seven others—California, Colorado, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, and Washington—courts have suggested one way or another that the Constitution requires courts to allow such a defense. The “no insanity” states are therefore outliers, and the cert. grant suggests there’s some desire among the justices to bring them to heel. But only four were needed for the grant; a decision for Kahler will require five.
It seems likely that the Court granted cert. in the next case, Ramos v. Louisiana,to reverse. The issue in Ramos has been mooted many times since a widely reviled 1972 Supreme Court decision called Apodaca v. Oregon.
The decision in Apodaca is a shambles. Four justices argued that the Sixth Amendment didn’t require unanimous juries at all, in either state or federal trials; four others wrote that the amendment did require unanimous juries in both state and federal trials. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., relatively new to the Court, wrote a bizarre opinion suggesting that the amendment did require unanimous juries in federal trials but that, even though the amendment applied to the states by virtue of the Fourteenth Amendment, it somehow applied in a limited form that did not require unanimous verdicts in state cases.
Nobody today thinks that Powell’s rule makes any sense, but both Oregon and Louisiana have continued to apply their jury rules, and dozens of defendants have begged the high court to revisit the issue. Next term it will. (Louisiana’s voters last November approved a referendum imposing a unanimity requirement for trials beginning on January 1 of this year. The state argues that this moots the case, but a lot of people already in prison in Louisiana think they should have the benefit of the unanimous-jury rule, and will do more hard time if they don’t get it.)
Evangelista Ramos was convicted of second-degree murder by a Louisiana jury in 2016. The jury split 10–2 after hearing mostly circumstantial evidence. After the conviction, Ramos’s appointed counsel argued on appeal that the evidence was insufficient, but in a separate brief, Ramos, proceeding without a lawyer, raised the unanimous-jury issue. The state appellate courts rejected his brief.
Then a Louisiana criminal-justice reform nonprofit called the Promise of Justice Initiative filed a cert. petition for Ramos. On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to take up his case. Ramos’s new lawyers cite historical evidence that the non-unanimous-jury rule was adopted in 1898 by a state constitutional convention called with the express purpose of, as the president of the convention put it, “establish[ing] white supremacy in this state.” This evidence, they suggest, shows that the non-unanimous rule was put in place precisely to prevent minority jurors from blocking a white majority’s decision to punish black defendants.
The Court has recently shown some enthusiasm for decisions that the Fourteenth Amendment “incorporates” all the provisions of the Bill of Rights. In 2010, it held that the Second Amendment “right to bear arms” applies full force against the states; last month it reached the same conclusion about the “excessive fines” clause of the Eighth Amendment. Taking down the embarrassing Apodaca rule may be part of that long-term judicial project.
Finally, in Mathena v. Malvo, the Court will decide whether Lee Boyd Malvo, one of the two Beltway snipers, is entitled to a new sentencing procedure. Malvo, who was 17 at the time, roamed the highways of the District of Columbia and Maryland, along with John Allen Muhammad, a quarter century his senior; the two randomly shot and killed 10 people at a distance with a high-powered rifle. Malvo was tried and, in 2004, sentenced to life in prison without parole; Muhammad was executed by Virginia in 2009.
However, in a 2012 decision called Miller v. Alabama, the Supreme Court decided that, in most cases, a mandatory “no parole” sentence violates the Eighth Amendment rights of defendants who were underage at the time of their crimes. Because children can change so much as they mature, the Court reasoned, such prisoners are entitled to a chance to show that they might, someday, be safe to release on parole—and an automatic no-parole sentence denies them that chance. Then, in 2016, in Montgomery v. Alabama, the Court announced that the Miller rule was retroactive. That meant courts must apply it to state cases of defendants who were already convicted, but were seeking review of their sentences.
Malvo sought such review in federal court in Virginia. A federal district judge held that he was entitled to a new sentencing procedure, and the Fourth Circuit affirmed. Virginia had argued that it actually was a “discretionary” sentence—since under long-standing Virginia rules, the trial court could have suspended some or all of Malvo’s life term. The Fourth Circuit concluded that the judge who sentenced Malvo believed that he had no such discretion.
But even if the Virginia rule made the sentence discretionary, the appeals court argued, the Montgomery decision required setting it aside. That’s because, the court said, Montgomery held that a no-parole sentence can’t be handed down unless the sentencing judge specifically finds that the defendant’s “‘crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility,’ as distinct from ‘the transient immaturity of youth.’”
It’s hard to imagine that the justices burn with compassion for Malvo (most of them were living in the region in 2002, when everyone was terrified of being shot at the gas pumps). But the high court almost had to take this case, because the Fourth Circuit’s reading of Montgomery directly conflicts with the Virginia Supreme Court’s. The Virginia court reads the decision to apply only to mandatory sentences—rendering the need for a judicial finding of “incorrigibility” unnecessary. The prospect is that prisoners who appeal to the state court will be turned down under its rule, then immediately petition the federal courts—and win. Something has to give.
All together, these cases show a Court trying honorably to play its role as supervisor of the criminal-justice system—and it may be poised to make things better. In a season of dread, Monday’s order provides reason to hope that some small good news may be on the way.
To read more CLICK HERE




Saturday, May 16, 2015

GateHouse: Reagan’s would-be assassin may soon be a free man

On March 30, 1981, Hinckley shot President Ronald Reagan, with the intent to assassinate him. Hinckley’s defense team never denied that he shot the president. Instead, they argued that he was laboring under a severe mental defect and was, in fact, insane.
Hinckley would have the jury believe that he acted involuntarily; essentially his life was controlled by his pathological obsession with the movie “Taxi Driver” and its star Jodie Foster. Hinckley's attorneys said he saw the movie 15 times, and was seeking to reenact the events of the movie in his own life.
Hinckley's attorneys argued that he was schizophrenic and that the movie, and Foster, were the controlling force behind his attempted assassination. The judge allowed the defense to introduce evidence, according to The New York Times, that Hinckley's brain showed signs of shrunken brain tissue, one of the common symptoms of schizophrenia. The jury found Hinckley not guilty by reason of insanity.
The jury's decision caused a public outcry. Congress, and a number of states, got to work rewriting the law to make it more difficult for a defendant to win a case using the insanity defense.
Congress adopted a number of provisions that dramatically changed the law. For instance, before Hinckley, the burden of proof in federal cases was on the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant was sane. The post-Hinckley reform legislation shifted the burden to the defendant to prove with clear and convincing evidence that he was legally insane at the time of the crime.
Following Congress' lead, more than 30 states made changes to their insanity defense. Over the 1980s and 1990s, many states shifted the burden and standard of proof in ways to make it more difficult to sustain an insanity defense.
In addition to raising more hurdles for a successful insanity defense, many states enacted laws providing for more restrictive confinement options for those acquitted by reason of insanity. Three states — Utah, Montana and Idaho — abolished the defense altogether, according to PBS’s “Frontline.”
The use of the insanity defense is rare. One study, cited by The Times, of eight states published in the 1990s found the insanity defense is used in about 1 percent of all felony cases, with only a quarter of those being successful.
Is it really that shocking that a man who shot the president might someday soon be walking free?
Hinckley already spends more than half of every month a free man. In fact, neither the government nor the judge believes it will be long before Hinckley is free.
Every month, Hinckley spends 17 days away from the hospital at his mother's home in Williamsburg, Virginia. The question for Senior U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman is whether to take the next step and grant him full release from the Hospital.
"Every witness agrees that he's ready and every witness agrees that the risk of danger is decidedly low," Hinckley’s lawyer Barry William Levine recently argued to the court.
According to National Public Radio, Levine said that depression and psychosis fueled Hinckley's drive to shoot President Reagan. He further offered that those conditions are "in full, stable, sustained remission" and have been for more than 20 years.
Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George P.C. His book “The Executioner’s Toll, 2010” was released by McFarland Publishing. You can reach him at www.mattmangino.com and follow him on Twitter at @MatthewTMangino.
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Saturday, July 5, 2014

The Cautionary Instruction: Oscar Pistorius strikes out with mental illness defense


Matthew T. Mangino
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/Ipso Facto
July 3, 2014
Olympic star and double-amputee Oscar Pistorius shot and killed his girlfriend in 2013. Pistorius is on trial in South Africa for her murder. He acknowledges that he shot Reeva Steenkamp when he mistook her for an intruder.
In May, Pistorius was ordered by a judge to undergo psychiatric tests at the request of the chief prosecutor, Gerrie Nel. The prosecutor said he had no option but to ask for it after an expert witness for the defense testified that Pistorius had an anxiety disorder since childhood that may have influenced his judgment when he fatally shot Steenkamp.
Under South African law Pistorius could be acquitted if it’s found that he was not criminally responsible for Steenkamp’s shooting because of a mental illness.
Under South African law a defendant may lack the capacity to knowingly commit a crime because of mental illness. This was previously referred to as an “insanity” defense — South African law now refers to it as pathological incapacity.
By law the defense of pathological incapacity provides:
“A person who commits an act or makes an omission which constitutes an offence and who at the time of such commission or omission suffers from a mental illness or mental defect which makes him or her incapable —
(a) of appreciating the wrongfulness of his or her act or omission; or
(b) of acting in accordance with an appreciation of the wrongfulness of his or her act or omission, shall not be criminally responsible for such act or omission.”
In the United States a majority of states, including Pennsylvania, apply the M’Naughten Rule when evaluating insanity.
Under the law, a person is legally insane only if, at the time of the act, he was laboring "under such a defect of reason, from disease of the mind, as not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing or, if the actor did know the quality of the act, that he did not know that what he was doing was wrong.''
The rule sets a very high standard. The insanity defense is sought in few cases and proving it is extremely rare.
"You can be severely mentally ill but not qualify as legally insane,'' said Thomas P. Rogers, a lawyer from eastern Pennsylvania.
The hurdle is such, said Rogers, that a defendant has to "believe he's shooting Martians, not his wife, because voices are telling him they're Martians, and that he's supposed to shoot them.''
After a month long break in the trial, a panel of mental health experts concluded that Pistorius was not suffering from a mental illness when he killed his girlfriend. The experts reported to the court that Pistorius was "capable of appreciating the wrongfulness of his act" when he killed Steenkamp.

Matthew T. Mangino is of counsel with Luxenberg, Garbett, Kelly & George, P.C. He is the former district attorney of Lawrence County and just completed a six year term on the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole. His weekly column on crime and punishment is syndicated by GateHouse New Service. You can read his musings on the criminal justice system at www.mattmangino.com and follow Matt on Twitter @MatthewTMangino. His new book The Executioner’s Toll, 2010: The Crimes, Arrests, Trials, Appeals, Last Meals, Final Words and Executions of 46 Persons in the United States is now available from McFarland & Company publishers.
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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Supreme Court refuses to hear insanity defense case

Idaho, Montana, Utah and Kansas only states without insanity defense

Lawyers in Idaho say the state's lack of an insanity defense is unconstitutional. The Idaho Supreme Court has rejected the last six appeals on the issue, stretching back to 1990. The U.S. Supreme Court announced last month it would not hear an Idaho appeal, effectively ending that case and reinforcing Idaho’s decision — along with Montana, Utah, and Kansas — not to allow a traditional insanity defense, reported the Idaho Statesman.

The term insanity is primarily legal, not psychological. There is no "insane" diagnosis listed in the DSM. Insanity is a term pertaining to a defendant's ability to determine right from wrong when a crime is committed.

One encouraging thing for advocates is that justices Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor said they would have heard a recent Idaho case rejected by the full Supreme Court. Breyer even wrote a public dissent, saying justices should consider whether Idaho’s modification of the insanity defense is consistent with the 14th Amendment’s promise of “due process.”

Jeffrey Fisher, a Stanford Law School professor specializing in the Supreme Court, told the Statesman he could understand why Idaho lawyers may be discouraged. But he sees progress.  Fisher said. “Now, we have three justices saying we should have a serious review of what Idaho is doing, and that is a significant step forward. A fair reading of (Breyer’s dissent) is that they have real misgivings about Idaho law.”

Fisher said he, like his Idaho counterparts, feels re-establishing the insanity defense is a matter of basic fairness. “I am persuaded from the extraordinarily deep history, across centuries of Anglo-American law, that someone who is truly incapable of knowing right from wrong should be allowed” the insanity defense, he said. “I don’t think states are entitled to abandon that principle.”

The Idaho Legislature banned the insanity defense amid the national outcry over the acquittal of would-be assassin John Hinckley Jr., who shot President Ronald Reagan in 1981. Boise defense attorney David Leroy, who was Idaho’s attorney general when the state did away with the insanity defense in 1982, explained the rationale for the change in 2009.“Idaho eliminated the insanity defense in the old English common law sense. That is the argument that the defendant was out of touch with reality and didn’t understand the consequences of their actions,” Leroy said, according to the Statesman.

“We determined in 1982 that a better test (for insanity) would be to ask the jury to examine the specific mental state of the defendant at the time of the crime for the presence or absence of a specific element.“Since the prosecutor must prove all elements of the crime to convict, the absence of such proof as to a mental element still constitutes a defense.” Lawyers in Idaho trials can still offer evidence of mental illness for mitigation purposes, but not as a defense.

The Idaho Supreme Court has said, “If the state cannot prove criminal intent beyond a reasonable doubt, a defendant, sane or not, will be found not guilty.”In his dissent, Breyer pointed out that Idaho’s standard for the insanity defense differs from other states: Idaho permits the conviction of someone “who knew what he was doing but had no capacity to understand it was wrong.” Fisher told the Statesman that uncertainty over what the insanity defense allows and doesn’t allow in Idaho is an encouraging sign for the next challenge.

To read more: http://www.idahostatesman.com/2012/12/15/2381836/fight-over-insanity-defense-will.html#storylink=cpy