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- <text id=92TT0233>
- <title>
- Feb. 03, 1992: Trials:Do Mad Acts a Madman Make?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 03, 1992 The Fraying Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 17
- TRIALS
- Do Mad Acts a Madman Make?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>When Milwaukee mass murderer Jeffrey Dahmer goes on trial this
- week, so will the insanity defense
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--With reporting by Georgia Pabst/
- Milwaukee and Elizabeth Rudulph/New York
- </p>
- <p> Jeffrey Dahmer's deeds beggar the imagination. The
- 31-year-old former chocolate-factory worker, who is charged with
- the murder of 15 young men, reportedly drugged some victims and
- performed crude lobotomies on them in an attempt to create
- zombie-like companions. He had sex with some corpses and
- dismembered bodies, tossing hands in a kettle and storing a
- severed head in the refrigerator as well as a heart to be eaten
- later. Who doubts that Dahmer's behavior is mad? But is he
- insane?
- </p>
- <p> That's the vexing question that will face 12 jurors in the
- trial that opens this week in Milwaukee. Dahmer has pleaded
- guilty to the killings, but contends that he cannot be held
- criminally responsible because of mental illness. If found
- insane, he will be sent to a state mental hospital, where after
- a year he could begin petitioning for release; if judged sane,
- he will go to prison for life. The sensational trial is sure to
- reignite debate on the insanity defense, one of the messiest and
- most controversial areas of law.
- </p>
- <p> To most Americans, the plea is a cop-out--a too easy
- alibi that could allow monsters like Dahmer to return to the
- streets. In fact, the insanity defense is seldom used and rarely
- successful. Experts estimate the defense is raised in fewer than
- 1% of the 13 million criminal cases filed annually in the U.S.
- On those rare occasions where it succeeds, the offense is
- usually nonviolent, and the prosecution and defense agree that
- the accused is deranged. One example: a homeless person with
- schizophrenia who is charged with disorderly conduct.
- </p>
- <p> Few defendants in homicides or assaults are acquitted on
- the ground of mental illness. Would-be presidential assassin
- John Hinckley's plea was accepted, but insanity claims by
- Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi and mass murderer John Wayne
- Gacy were rebuffed. Experts predict Dahmer's bid will fail as
- well. "There is a point at which crimes reach such a magnitude
- that people don't care why someone did something," observes San
- Diego criminal attorney John Cotsirilos.
- </p>
- <p> What makes the plea so difficult is that it is inherently
- confusing. "It's an attempt to explain rationally the
- irrational," says William Moffitt, an Alexandria, Va., defense
- attorney. The legal term insanity bears little resemblance to
- common parlance or even medical usage. Generally, the legal test
- is that at the time a crime was committed, the defendant was
- suffering from a mental defect that made him or her incapable
- of telling right from wrong. Some states also consider whether
- a defendant's mental illness impaired the ability to control
- one's actions. The Dahmer case is expected to hinge on this
- so-called irresistible-impulse defense.
- </p>
- <p> Defendants over the years have advanced some bizarre
- arguments to assert insanity. Last year, for instance, a Florida
- forensic psychiatrist who was charged with bribery
- unsuccessfully argued that he was driven insane by his years of
- work with criminals. "Being a forensic psychiatrist for a long
- time is not a mental defect," declares Dr. Park Elliott Dietz
- of Newport Beach, Calif. Usually, defendants must have a defined
- mental illness. Moreover, it has to be directly linked to the
- crime. "Someone may have schizophrenia or manic-depressive
- illness, but that doesn't mean they didn't know what they were
- doing or couldn't control their conduct," explains Richard
- Rosner, a forensic psychiatrist at New York University school
- of medicine.
- </p>
- <p> However, determining someone's past state of mind--or
- competency to stand trial--is an imprecise business.
- Psychiatrists review the accused's history, talk to relatives
- and friends and, most important, interview the defendant.
- Psychiatrist Dietz, who will serve as an expert witness for
- Dahmer's prosecutors, believes studying police evidence and the
- crime scene is also crucial. One sign that a defendant knew
- right from wrong: taking steps to avoid getting caught, such as
- hiding the victims' bodies.
- </p>
- <p> Though psychiatrists claim they are adept at spotting
- fakers, they concede that mistakes do occur. Bianchi fooled some
- examiners into thinking he had a multiple-personality disorder
- before being unmasked. David ("Son of Sam") Berkowitz conned two
- psychiatrists with his tale of barking dogs conveying demonic
- messages to kill. Long after his trial, he admitted fabricating
- the story. Psychiatrists also note that attorneys sometimes
- withhold vital information, thus leading to incorrect
- conclusions about the accused's state of mind.
- </p>
- <p> Murder defendants most likely to win insanity verdicts
- tend to have killed family members, often in a sudden outburst,
- and have no prior record of violence. "The jury identifies
- with that sort of person," explains forensic psychiatrist
- Emanuel Tanay of Wayne State University. Successful defendants
- also tend to be well educated and well funded. And it helps to
- be white: juries are more likely to send blacks to prison,
- whites to hospitals.
- </p>
- <p> Such inequities outrage some experts. Psychiatrist Abraham
- L. Halpern of New York Medical College would like to see the
- insanity defense abolished: "It sends people who are not
- mentally ill to hospitals, while people with clear-cut
- psychiatric illnesses are left to deteriorate in prison without
- even minimum therapy." But others believe that allowing the
- defense, with all its imperfections, is preferable to sentencing
- people who are mentally incapable of grasping their crimes to
- prison. Says psychiatrist Phillip Resnick of Case Western
- Reserve University: "By judging a person insane, we are saying
- they are not blameworthy, that they are not suitable for
- punishment." For Dahmer, that absolution seems remote.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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