Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Insanity Defense: Encyclopedia of Everyday Law

Insanity Defense: Encyclopedia of Everyday Law

Insanity Defense

Background

Probably the most controversial of all criminal defense strategies, the INSANITY DEFENSE is also, ironically, one of the least used. On many occasions when it has been used, particularly in the much-publicized 1984 ACQUITTAL of John W. Hinckley for an attempted assassination of a president, the insanity defense has tended to provoke public debate.

Put simply, the insanity defense asserts that the criminal DEFENDANT is not guilty by reason of insanity. The theory behind the defense is persons who are insane cannot have the intent required to perform a criminal act because they either do not know that act is wrong or cannot control their actions even when they understand the act is wrong. But this theory is controversial because insanity itself is difficult to define, and the circumstances in which insanity can be used to excuse criminal responsibility are difficult to define.

The insanity defense has existed since the twelfth century, but initially it was not considered an argument for the defendant to be found not guilty. Instead, it was a way for a defendant to receive a PARDON or a way to mitigate a sentence. The idea that insanity could bar theCONVICTION of a defendant arose in the early nineteenth century, in the writings of a influential scholar Isaac Ray, whose treatise, The Medical JURISPRUDENCE of Insanity, and in the decision in a seminal case in England called M'Naghten (or sometimes McNaughtan).

The M'Naghten Rule

In 1843, Daniel M'Naghten, an Englishman who was apparently a paranoid schizophrenic under the delusion he was being persecuted, shot and killed Edward Drummond, Secretary to British Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel. M'Naghten was under the delusion that Drummond was Peel. To the surprise of the nation, M'Naghten was found not guilty on the grounds he was insane at the time of his act. The subsequent public outrage convinced the English House of Lords to establish standards for the defense of insanity, the results subsequently referred to as theM'NAGHTEN RULE.

The M'Naghten rule states: "Every man is to be presumed to be sane, and . . . that to establish a defense on the ground of insanity, it must be clearly proved that, at the time of the committing of the act, the party ACCUSED was laboring under such a defect of reason, from disease of mind, as not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing; or if he did know it, that he did not know he was doing what was wrong. "

The test to determine if defendants can distinguish right from wrong is based on the idea that they must know the difference in order to be convicted of a crime. Determining defendants' ability to do so may seem straightforward enough, but in practice in cases in which the M'Naghten standard is used dilemmas often arise. One of these is what constitutes the defendants' "knowledge." Some questions concern defendants' knowledge that their criminal acts are wrong and their knowledge that laws exist which prohibit these acts.

Criticism of the M'Naghten test focuses on the test's concentration on defendants' cognitive abilities. Then, too, questions occur about how to treat defendants who know their acts are against the law but who cannot control their impulses to commit them. Similarly, the courts need to determine how to evaluate and assign responsibility for emotional factors and compulsion. Finally, because of the rule's inflexible cognitive standard, it tends to be very difficult for defendants to be found not guilty by reason of insanity. Despite these complications, M'Naghten survives and is currently the rule in a majority of states in regard to the insanity defense (sometimes combined with the irresistible impulse test, discussed below).

The Irresistible Impulse Test

In response to criticisms of M'Naghten, some legal commentators began to suggest expanding the definition of insanity to include more than a cognitive element. Such a test would encompass not only whether defendants know right from wrong but also whether they could control their impulses to commit wrong-doing. The irresistible impulse test was first adopted by the Alabama Supreme Court in the 1887 case of Parsons v. State. The Alabama Court stated that even though the defendant could tell right from wrong, he was subject to "the DURESS of such mental disease [that] he had... lost the power to choose between right and wrong" and that "his free agency was at the time destroyed," and thus, "the alleged crime was so connected with such mental disease, in the relation of cause and effect, as to have been the product of it solely." In so finding, the court assigned responsibility for the crime to the mental illness despite the defendant's ability to distinguish right from wrong.

The irresistible impulse test gained acceptance in various states as an appendage to M'Naghten, whose test of right versus wrong was still considered a vital part of any definition of insanity. In some cases, irresistible impulse was considered a variation on M'Naghten; in others it was considered a separate test. Though the Irresistible Impulse test was considered an important corrective on M'Naghten's cognitive BIAS, it still came under some criticism of its own. For example, it seemed to make the definition of insanity too broad, failing to take into account the impossibility of determining which acts were uncontrollable rather than merely uncontrolled, and also making it easier to fake insanity. The test was also criticized as being too narrow: like M'Naghten, the test seemed to exclude all but those totally unable to control their actions. Nevertheless, several states currently use this test along with the M'Naghten rule to determine insanity, and the American Law Institute in its Model Penal Code definition of insanity adopted a modified version of it.

The Durham Rule

The DURHAM RULE, originally adopted in New Hampshire in 1871, was embraced by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in the 1954 case of Durham v. United States. The Durham Rule, sometimes referred to as the "product test," provides the defendant is not "criminally responsible if his unlawful act is the product of a mental disease or defect."

The Durham Rule was originally seen as a way of simplifying the M'Naghten Rule and the Irresistible Impulse test by making insanity and its relation to the crime a matter of objective diagnosis. Unfortunately, such a diagnosis proved to be harder to make in practice than in theory. The test was criticized because the Circuit Court had provided no real definition of mental disease or defect and no definition of product either. The Durham Rule proved very difficult to apply, and the Circuit Court abandoned it in 1972. Currently, only the state of New Hampshire still uses the Durham Rule as a way to define insanity.

The American Law Institute's Model Penal Code Test

In response to the criticisms of the various tests for the insanity defense, the American Law Institute (ALI) designed a new test for its Model Penal Code in 1962. Under this test, "a person is not responsible for criminal conduct if at the time of such conduct as a result of mental disease or defect he lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate the criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law."

The penal code test is much broader than the M'Naghten Rule and the Irresistible Impulse test. It asks whether defendants have a substantial incapacity to appreciate the criminality of their conduct or to conform their conduct to the law rather than the absolute knowledge required by M'Naghten and the absolute inability to control conduct required by the Irresistible Impulse test.

The ALI test also requires that the mental disease or defect be a medical diagnosis. In this way, it manages to incorporate elements of all three of its predecessors: the knowledge of right and wrong required by M'Naghten, the prerequisite of lack of control in the Irresistible Impulse test, and the diagnosis of mental disease and defect required by Durham.

Such a broad based rule received wide acceptance, and by 1982 all federal courts and a majority of state courts had adopted the ALI test. While some states have since dropped the ALI test, and it no longer applies at a federal level, 18 states still use the ALI test in their definitions of insanity.

The Hinckley Trial and Its Aftermath

In 1982, John W. Hinckley, who had attempted in 1981 to assassinate President Ronald Reagan, was acquitted by a District of Columbia court by reason of insanity. The enormous outrage after Hinckley's acquittal led three states to drop the insanity defense entirely (Montana, Utah, and Idaho, joined by a fourth, Kansas, in 1995). Other states reformed their insanity defense statutes, by adopting the M'Naghten standard over the ALI standard, by shifting the burden of proof from the state to the defense, by changing their commitment and release procedures, or adopting a "Guilty but Mentally Ill" defense. In addition, the federal courts shifted from the ALI standard to a new law eliminating the irresistible impulse test for insanity defenses in federal crimes.

Burden of Proof

The question of who has the burden of proof with an insanity defense has been a source of controversy. Before the Hinckley verdict, a majority of states had the burden of proof rest with the state; that is, the PROSECUTOR had to prove the defendant was insane. After the Hinckley verdict, the vast majority of states required the defense to prove affirmatively insanity. In states where the burden is on the defense to prove insanity, the defense is required to show either clear and convincing EVIDENCE or a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant is insane. In states where the burden is still on prosecutors to prove sanity, they are required to prove it BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT.

Commitment and Release Procedures

Contrary to uninformed opinion, defendants found not guilty by reason of insanity are not simply released from CUSTODY. They are generally committed to a mental hospital where they can be confined for longer than their prison terms would have been. In the case of Jones v. United States, the Supreme Court in 1983 backed this proposition, ruling that the sentence that criminal defendants would have received had they been convicted should have no bearing on how long they could be committed to a mental hospital.

After Hinckley, many states changed their commitment policies to ensure that a defendant found not guilty by reason of insanity would be required to stay in a mental hospital for a certain period of time for evaluation following acquittal. Previously, no time was specified. Also, several states changed the burden of proof for release from the state to defendants.

The Federal Insanity Defense Reform Act

The Federal Insanity Defense Reform Act, codified at 18 U.S.C. s. 17, holds: "It is an affirmative defense to a prosecution under any Federal STATUTE that, at the time of the commission of the acts constituting the offense, the defendant, as a result of a severe mental disease or defect, was unable to appreciate the nature and quality or the wrongfulness of his acts. Mental disease or defect does not otherwise constitute a defense." This act, a response to the Hinckley verdict, eliminated the irresistible impulse test from the insanity defense under federal law. The act also provided that "the defendant has the burden of proving the defense of insanity by clear and convincing evidence." Previously under federal law, the government had the burden of proving sanity.

Guilty but Mentally Ill

Finally, the Hinckley verdict accelerated the ADOPTION of "guilty but mentally ill" verdicts by states. "Guilty but mentally ill" verdict allows mentally ill defendants to be found criminally liable and requires them to receive psychiatric treatment while incarcerated, or, alternatively, to be placed in a mental hospital and then when they are well enough to be moved to a prison to serve their sentences. Laws allowing pleas and verdicts of guilty but mentally ill were first adopted in Michigan in 1975, and concurrent with or subsequent to the Hinckley trial were adopted by 12 more states.

Current Status of the Insanity Defense among the States

The following list gives the status of the insanity defense in all 50 states, describes the test used, the party on whom the burden of proof lies, and whether the state uses the guilty but mentally ill verdict.

ALABAMA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

ALASKA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

ARIZONA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

ARKANSAS: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

CALIFORNIA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

COLORADO: M'Naghten Rule with irresistible impulse test, burden of proof on state.

CONNECTICUT: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

DELAWARE: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

FLORIDA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on state.

GEORGIA: M'Naghten Rule with irresistible impulse test, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

HAWAII: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

IDAHO: Abolished insanity defense.

ILLINOIS: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

INDIANA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

IOWA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

KANSAS: Abolished insanity defense.

KENTUCKY: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

LOUISIANA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

MAINE: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

MARYLAND: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

MASSACHUSETTS: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on state.

MICHIGAN: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on state, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

MINNESOTA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

MISSISSIPPI: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on state.

MISSOURI: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

MONTANA: Abolished insanity defense, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

NEBRASKA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

NEVADA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

NEW HAMPSHIRE: Durham standard, burden of proof on defendant.

NEW JERSEY: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on state.

NEW MEXICO: M'Naghten Rule with irresistible impulse test, burden of proof on state, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

NEW YORK: M'Naghten Rule (modified), burden of proof on defendant.

NORTH CAROLINA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

NORTH DAKOTA: ALI Model Penal Code standard (modified), burden of proof on state.

OHIO: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

OKLAHOMA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on state.

OREGON: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

PENNSYLVANIA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

RHODE ISLAND: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

SOUTH CAROLINA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

SOUTH DAKOTA: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

TENNESSEE: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on state.

TEXAS: M'Naghten Rule with irresistible impulse test, burden of proof on defendant.

UTAH: Abolished insanity defense, guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.

VERMONT: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

VIRGINIA: M'Naghten Rule with irresistible impulse test, burden of proof on defendant.

WASHINGTON: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant.

WEST VIRGINIA: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on state.

WISCONSIN: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

WYOMING: ALI Model Penal Code standard, burden of proof on defendant.

Additional Resources

American Jurisprudence. 2nd Edition, ss. 47-91, 281, 483. West Group, 1998.

Before and After Hinckley: Evaluating Insanity Defense Reform. Harry Steadman et al., The Guilford Press, 1993.

Mental Health and Disability Law. Donald H. J. Hermann, West Group, 1997.

Model Penal Code and Commentaries. American Law Institute, 1985.

Parsons v. State. Supreme Court of Alabama, July 28, 1887.

"Those Crazy Kids, Providing the Insanity Defense in Juvenile Courts." Emily Pollock, Minnesota Law Review, June 2001.

"Toward A New Test for The Insanity Defense: Incorporating the Discoveries of Neuroscience into Moral and Legal Theories." Laura Reider, UCLA Law Review, Oct. 1998.

U. S. Code, Title 18: Crimes and Criminal Procedure, Part I: Crimes, Chapter 1: General Provisions. U. S. House of Representatives, 2001. Available athttp://uscode.house.gov/title_18.htm.

Organizations

American Bar Association Criminal Justice Section
740 15th Street, NW, 10th Floor
Washington, DC 20005-1009 USA
Phone: (202) 662-1500
Fax: (202) 662-1501
URL: http://www.abanet.org/crimjust/contact.html
Primary Contact: Thomas Smith, Section Director

American Psychological Association (APA)
750 First Street, NE,
Washington, DC 20002-4242 USA
Phone: (202) 336-5510
URL: http://www.apa.org/
Primary Contact: Raymond D. Fowler, Chief Executive Officer

Association of Federal Defense Attorneys
8530 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 404
Beverly Hills, CA 90211 USA
Phone: (310) 397-1001
E-Mail: AFDA2@AOL.com
URL: http://www.afda.org/
Primary Contact: Gregory Nicolaysen, President


Monday, November 29, 2010

Government Considers Disabling Cell Phones in Cars : Discovery News

Government Considers Disabling Cell Phones in Cars : Discovery News


In addition to its efforts to educate drivers about the dangers of distracted driving, the U.S. Department of Transportation is evaluating technology that would disable cell phones in automobiles. The move is a response to the growing number of deaths and injuries related to distracted driving.
"There's a lot of technology out there now that can disable phones and we're looking at that," Raymond LaHood, the Secretary of Transportation said during a discussion during MSNBC's "Morning Joe." "That's one way. But you have to have good laws, you have to have good enforcement, and you have to have people take personal responsibility. That's the bottom line."
In addition to his comments on disabled cell phones, LaHood also announced a new video campaign, "Faces of Distracted Driving." The series of online videos tells the stories of several victims of distracted driving. The DoT plans to add a new video every few weeks.
LaHood said that nearly 5,500 people died from distracted driving last year, and that about half a million were injured. That's a low estimate, according to Paul Atchley, a scientist at the University of Kansas who studies distracted driving.
LaHood's figures only account for known deaths or injuries -- suspected deaths or injuries aren't included. The real numbers, said Atchley, are likely far higher, and will only get higher.
While there is no federal law against using a cell phone while driving a vehicle, dozens of states prohibit texting while driving in an effort to reduce the number of deaths or injuries. Several other states forbid drivers from using hand-held cell phones.
Hardware, such as cell phone jammers, are illegal, and the FCC isn't likely to approve any kind of jamming equipment. That would leave software from companies like Zoomsafter, tXtBlocker and iZup.
While the specifics differ, the general idea is the same. When a cell phone or a vehicle exceeds a certain speed, determined by the car and transmitted via Bluetooth or by the speed of the cell phone itself as measured by cell phone towers, the phone is automatically disabled.
That won't work, said Atchley. Most of these services are voluntary. It is not difficult for users to either not activate them, or to work around them.
The real answer to the problem is a change in people's attitudes. The research on drunk driving and distracted driving is quite similar, but the reactions of people to both are far different.
"When we ask young drivers about drunk driving, they say that judges should throw the book at drunk drivers, but not the person texting while driving," said Atchley.
"The bottom line is that people want to use these devices," said Atchley. "And things are going to get worse before they get better."

Monday, November 8, 2010

Michigan assistant AG fired after targeting openly gay student leader - CNN.com

Michigan assistant AG fired after targeting openly gay student leader - CNN.com

what an odd story. Unbelievable actions by a grown man.

Tonight on AC360°, Deborah Gordon, attorney for college student Chris Armstrong, speaks with CNN's Anderson Cooper. Tune in beginning at 10 pm ET.
(CNN) -- An assistant attorney general in Michigan is out of a job, fired after targeting an openly gay University of Michigan student leader online and in person -- then lying about his actions to investigators -- state Attorney General Mike Cox said Monday.
Andrew Shirvell "repeatedly violated office policies, engaged in borderline stalking behavior and inappropriately used state resources," Cox said.
The lawyer for Chris Armstrong, the university's student body president, lauded the decision by Cox to axe Shirvell.
"It's inexplicable -- he knows nothing about Chris," attorney Deborah Gordon said on CNN's "AC 360" about Shirvell, who claimed that Armstrong was a "racist, elitist liar" and "privileged pervert."
"We're very gratified that justice was done ... and, for the time, Shirvell is going to be held responsible," Gordon said.
Shirvell's lawyer, Philip J. Thomas, acknowledged his client's termination to CNN but did not comment further. He told the Detroit Free Press that his client was "devastated" by Cox's announcement, claiming that Shirvell's bosses gave him positive reviews and knew of his activities outside work.
"This smells political to me," Thomas told the newspaper. "There's been a tremendous piling-on against Andrew. The liberal media started this tempest in a teapot."
Gordon responded by telling CNN's Anderson Cooper on Monday night that she felt it was "pathetic and lame for (Shirvell) to be whining about being bullied."
In late September, Cox defended Shirvell's authoring of a blog titled "Chris Armstrong Watch" that railed against the college senior and sociology major.
"Here in America, we have this thing called the First Amendment, which allows people to express what they think and engage in political and social speech," Cox told CNN. "He's clearly a bully ... but is that protected under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution? Yes."
But in Monday's announcement, Cox said he concluded that Shirvell's dismissal was warranted due to actions "unbecoming a state employee" that went beyond the blog.
Cox said he wasn't firing Shirvell for "exercising ... First Amendment rights, (however) unpopular (the) positions might be," but for persistent and personal harassment.
According to Cox, Shirvell showed up at Armstrong's home three times -- including once at 1:30 a.m. Cox said that this early morning visit, especially, showed that Shirvell was intent on harassing Armstrong, not just exercising his right to free speech.
While Shirvell may not be charged criminally with stalking, Cox said that he behaved in a way that "was harassing, uninvited and showed a pattern that was, in the everyday sense, stalking." He cited numerous examples, including:
-- Calling the office of U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, where Armstrong worked, "in an attempt to slander Armstrong" and get him fired.
-- Trying to "out" Armstrong's friends -- some of whom were not gay -- as homosexual.
-- Harassing Armstrong's friends while out socializing in Ann Arbor, the home of the University of Michigan.
Cox had originally defended Shirvell in part because he believed his blog was being done when he wasn't at work. But he said Monday that Shirvell had, in fact, posted online "attacks" on Armstrong and called Pelosi's office while he was on the job as an assistant attorney general.
In his statement, Cox also said that Shirvell lied to investigators "on several occasions during his displinary hearing."
After his blog garnered national media attention, Shirvell placed it behind a privacy firewall, making it available only to invited readers.
In early October, he took a voluntary leave of absence from his job. Around that time, Shirvell, a graduate of the University of Michigan, was barred from the Ann Arbor campus.
Shirvell defended his postings on "AC 360" on September 28, acknowledging that he protested outside Armstrong's house and called him "Satan's representative on the student assembly."
"I'm a Christian citizen exercising my First Amendment rights," Shirvell told Cooper. "I have no problem with the fact that Chris is a homosexual. I have a problem with the fact that he's advancing a radical homosexual agenda."
Armstrong, who said he has never spoken with Shirvell, told CNN days later that his principal issues as the school's student body president was longer cafeteria hours, gender-neutral housing and lower tuition costs.
"The things that are said about me are not my issues," Armstrong said.
Gordon said that she and her client aren't done going after Shirvell. That includes trying to have him disbarred as a licensed attorney in Michigan. She said investigators' finding that Shirvell lied to the attorney general's office is central to their case.
"This man is a loose cannon with a law license," said Gordon

Discovery sues 'Deadliest Catch' stars for $3M - The Hollywood Reporter

Discovery sues 'Deadliest Catch' stars for $3M - The Hollywood Reporter

Discovery sues 'Deadliest Catch' stars for $3M
10:57 AM 9/20/2010 by Eriq Gardner, AP
Says they failed to live up to spin-off agreement
'Deadliest Catch' captains say Discovery lawsuit smells fishyMost reality TV producers follow a simple format: Capture what actually happens, then have cast-members fill in story gaps with voice-overs and cutaways. But what about when reality TV stars jump ship before sitting down for the required interviews?They get sued, of course.Discovery is now seeking $3 million in damages after two stars of "Deadliest Catch," Jonathan and Andy Hillstrand, allegedly failed to live up to an agreement to complete a spin-off project. Read more on the THR, Esq. blog.According to the lawsuit, filed last week in Maryland Circuit Court, the Hillstrands were to film a one-time special called "Hillstranded." The duo was coming off five seasons of "Deadliest Catch," one of the most popular programs on any Discovery-affiliated network. The special was to document the team's various adventures in Alaska; work unrelated to their jobs as crab fisherman. Two weeks of principal photography were shot in June, but there was still work to do."The Hillstrand Defendants determined that they would reverse course, dishonor their promises, and refuse to render the services necessary to complete 'Hillstranded,'" reads the complaint.At the end of August, Discovery allegedly called the brothers to confirm a date, time and location for them to sit for interviews. The complaint says the only response was an e-mail from a lawyer for the brothers informing producers that they shouldn't attempt any further contact with them.Discovery argues that the failure by Hillstrands to complete work has caused production on the show to remain uncompleted. The company says that the show would have earned significant ratings and that it has suffered substantial losses as a result. It is suing for $3 million for breaching contract.The Hillstrand brothers couldn't be reached for comment.