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- <text id=90TT3010>
- <title>
- Nov. 12, 1990: The 21 Faces Of Sarah
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 12, 1990 Ready For War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 87
- The 21 Faces of Sarah
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A jury must decide whether a woman claiming to have multiple-
- personality disorder was sexually assaulted
- </p>
- <p> The events leading to the opening this week of one of the
- nation's most extraordinary sex-crime trials began with an
- encounter last June beside a fishing hole in Wisconsin's
- Menominee Park. Mark Peterson, 31, an Oshkosh grocery worker,
- wandered up to a group gathered on the bank and sat down beside
- a 26-year-old woman who called herself Franny. Over the next
- several minutes, as Peterson watched, her personality underwent
- several profound changes. Would you like to go dancing? he
- asked. Others who were present have since testified that they
- told Peterson the woman's true name was Sarah (her last name is
- being withheld). They explained that she suffered from
- multiple-personality disorder (MPD), an ailment involving
- several distinct "personalities" that take turns dominating the
- same body.
- </p>
- <p> Peterson nonetheless called Franny two days later and asked
- her out. According to the woman's pretrial testimony, they drove
- to an Oshkosh coffee shop, where Franny told Peterson about
- Jennifer, another personality, whom she described as a
- "20-year-old female who likes to dance and have fun." When the
- couple got back into Peterson's car, he summoned Jennifer and
- asked her, "Can I love you?" She answered, "O.K." (Later
- Jennifer would say she thought this was an invitation to go
- dancing.)
- </p>
- <p> Peterson stopped near a park, lowered the seat back and
- initiated sex. During intercourse, another personality, that of
- a six-year-old known as Emily, suddenly intruded. Peterson told
- Jennifer to tell Emily to keep their activities "a secret."
- Instead, Franny and Emily "told" Sarah, the predominant
- personality. Sarah subsequently phoned the police to report that
- she had been sexually assaulted.
- </p>
- <p> Did a crime actually take place? The 12 jurors who will hear
- evidence this week in Room 214 in the Winnebago County circuit
- courthouse in Oshkosh will break unusual legal ground in
- reaching a decision. Until now, the handful of U.S. criminal
- cases that have involved multiple-personality disorders have
- centered on sufferers who had committed crimes. They later
- maintained that they either were not responsible for their
- actions by reason of insanity or were incompetent to stand
- trial. For the first time, the testimony of a victim claiming to
- have the disorder could send someone else to prison for as many
- as 10 years. Sarah's claim is that she was mentally ill and as
- a result was unaware of having sex with the defendant. Thus, she
- says, she was sexually violated.
- </p>
- <p> Investigation of the alleged crime has sometimes evoked
- scenes from The Three Faces of Eve. During a one-day pretrial
- hearing, three of Sarah's 21 personalities were sworn in
- separately. In each instance, she closed her eyes, paused, then
- opened them to speak and act as different people. At one point,
- Sarah was given a glass of water by the judge. Later another
- personality did not remember having taken the drink.
- </p>
- <p> Two of the main issues before the Wisconsin court are
- whether Sarah was mentally ill at the time of the sexual act,
- and whether she was able to appraise Peterson's conduct. A third
- issue is whether Peterson knew of Sarah's condition; it is a
- crime in Wisconsin to engage in sexual intercourse with a person
- you believe to be mentally ill and who cannot assess your
- conduct.
- </p>
- <p> The most difficult challenge for prosecutors may be
- persuading the jury that Sarah's ailment is genuine. MPD is so
- difficult to diagnose that estimates of the number of U.S. cases
- vary wildly, from 7,000 to as many as 16,000. The American
- Psychiatric Association did not recognize the disorder as a
- legitimate mental illness until 1980. "Multiple-personality
- disorder is a very, very rare condition. Because of TV talk
- shows, it has become the disease of the month and the plea of
- the year," says Dr. Darold Treffert, director of the Fond du Lac
- County Health Care Center, who is expected to testify for the
- defense. "It's a condition that's fairly easily induced in a
- very suggestible patient."
- </p>
- <p> Therein lies the core of Peterson's defense. "I'm not
- convinced that [Sarah's] mentally ill or deficient," says his
- lawyer, Edward Salzsieder. As to the issue of consent, he
- argues, "If she appears to be perfectly normal and we have
- sexual contact between consenting adults, there's absolutely
- nothing wrong with it." Salzsieder maintains that the defendant
- had no idea that Sarah was mentally ill. At the time of his
- arrest, though, Peterson admitted to the police that he knew
- Sarah had several personalities and said that young Emily was
- "peeking" during their sexual activities.
- </p>
- <p> Winnebago County district attorney Joe Paulus believes he
- can demonstrate that Sarah was mentally ill and therefore
- victimized. Peterson, he charges, "learned about her disease,
- then called upon the personality that most wanted to have sex.
- He even told the manipulative personality [Jennifer] to keep it
- their little secret."
- </p>
- <p> While the testimony of Sarah and her various personalities
- promises to be riveting, Salzsieder may attack her credibility
- as a witness. That issue is causing considerable debate among
- experts. Within the legal system, says John Parry, director of
- the American Bar Association's Commission on the Mentally
- Disabled, "there's a great deal of disbelief about this
- disorder, a concern that people are faking."
- </p>
- <p> Dr. Frank Putnam of the Maryland-based National Institute
- of Mental Health counters that people with the disorder are no
- less honest than anyone else. But, he warns, "they may have
- trouble with memory of some facts, since amnesia is one of the
- complications of this condition." Peterson's trial, however, is
- one that no one else is likely to forget.
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe. Reported by Barbara Dolan/Oshkosh and Andrea
- Sachs/New York.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-