The study examined judges\u27 reasons for ordering pretrial forensic evaluation instead of civil commitment for persons with mental illness who are arrested. Fifty-five of 58 judges acknowledged having concerns about the adequacy of treatment or confinement in the civil mental health system, and 31 reported ordering pretrial forensic evaluations as a means of ensuring adequate treatment for patients who appear in their courts. Other frequently endorsed reasons for ordering these evaluations included lack of confidence in the ability to civilly commit mentally ill offenders and concerns about their being discharged prematurely. This study confirms suspicions that judges order pretrial evaluations to fill perceived gaps in the civil system
The pretrial period is critical for defendants in America’s criminal justice system. Previous resear...
A growing number of individuals with mental illness are receiving psychiatric treatment in the crimi...
We begin with a brief overview of the Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) and Guilty but Mentall...
The shift to dangerousness-oriented civil commitment criteria has led to speculation that mentally i...
This dissertation study focused upon four stages in the forensic evaluation process, including its i...
The current debate over the “police powers” versus parens patniae rationales for involuntary hospita...
The authors examined the records for 1975 of 87 pretrial commitments to Worcester State Hospital und...
A study of the legal and psychological prerequisites for forming a system for counteraction to crime...
This study compared the characteristics and court-ordered evaluation questions and responses among 4...
Judges play a central role in decision making in the justice system. This chapter reviews the extant...
There has been a great deal of research in the area of jury behavior in the criminal justice system....
In the past decade, at least eight cases involving issues at the intersection of criminal law and cl...
The sentence which a judge passes on an individual convicted of a crime depends. in addition to the ...
This study collaborated with the Arizona Superior Court's Pretrial Service program to determine the ...
Twenty trial court judges were surveyed to determine what information they considered pertinent in p...
The pretrial period is critical for defendants in America’s criminal justice system. Previous resear...
A growing number of individuals with mental illness are receiving psychiatric treatment in the crimi...
We begin with a brief overview of the Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) and Guilty but Mentall...
The shift to dangerousness-oriented civil commitment criteria has led to speculation that mentally i...
This dissertation study focused upon four stages in the forensic evaluation process, including its i...
The current debate over the “police powers” versus parens patniae rationales for involuntary hospita...
The authors examined the records for 1975 of 87 pretrial commitments to Worcester State Hospital und...
A study of the legal and psychological prerequisites for forming a system for counteraction to crime...
This study compared the characteristics and court-ordered evaluation questions and responses among 4...
Judges play a central role in decision making in the justice system. This chapter reviews the extant...
There has been a great deal of research in the area of jury behavior in the criminal justice system....
In the past decade, at least eight cases involving issues at the intersection of criminal law and cl...
The sentence which a judge passes on an individual convicted of a crime depends. in addition to the ...
This study collaborated with the Arizona Superior Court's Pretrial Service program to determine the ...
Twenty trial court judges were surveyed to determine what information they considered pertinent in p...
The pretrial period is critical for defendants in America’s criminal justice system. Previous resear...
A growing number of individuals with mental illness are receiving psychiatric treatment in the crimi...
We begin with a brief overview of the Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) and Guilty but Mentall...