The insanity defense must be retained because it is fundamentally just. Some mentally disordered defendants are so irrational at the time of their offenses that they lack the basic preconditions of moral responsibility, and therefore they must be excused. Retaining the insanity defense will not compromise public safety, nor will abolishing it lead to the remedying of associated social problems such as the substandard mental health care in jails and prisons. Nevertheless, there are real problems with the administration of the defense that must be addressed. The substantive tests must be revised, the burden of persuasion should be put on the defendant, the role of experts should be limited, and post-acquittal procedures must be made more rati...
With the enactment of the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984, sweeping changes were wrought in the ...
It is hard for lawyers and doctors to see eye to eye on the fundamental problem of how to eliminate ...
This paper provides a “first principles” analysis of the role and application of the insanity defenc...
abstract: It is not necessarily concerning that it is harder for some to conform to the law until it...
THE criminal law is one of many mechanisms for the control of human behavior. It defines conduct tha...
This article, which is based on and expands on an amicus brief the authors submitted to the United S...
Why do the courts let so many dangerous, violent people off on the insanity defense? If they kill s...
There are sound public policy reasons for considering a reform of state laws concerning commitment o...
article published in law reviewThis article argues that mental illness should no longer be the basis...
abstract: This thesis explores the evolution of the insanity defense throughout legal history beginn...
The great lengths to which the defense of insanity has been carried in homicide cases has induced nu...
This Comment addresses the present gap in insanity-defense laws created by the defense’s abolition a...
Legal insanity is an element of many legal systems, and it has often stirred debate. It appears that...
The 1982 Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) verdict in the trial of John Hinckley, Jr., would-b...
The jury\u27s decision in John Hinckley\u27s trial following his attempted assassination of Presiden...
With the enactment of the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984, sweeping changes were wrought in the ...
It is hard for lawyers and doctors to see eye to eye on the fundamental problem of how to eliminate ...
This paper provides a “first principles” analysis of the role and application of the insanity defenc...
abstract: It is not necessarily concerning that it is harder for some to conform to the law until it...
THE criminal law is one of many mechanisms for the control of human behavior. It defines conduct tha...
This article, which is based on and expands on an amicus brief the authors submitted to the United S...
Why do the courts let so many dangerous, violent people off on the insanity defense? If they kill s...
There are sound public policy reasons for considering a reform of state laws concerning commitment o...
article published in law reviewThis article argues that mental illness should no longer be the basis...
abstract: This thesis explores the evolution of the insanity defense throughout legal history beginn...
The great lengths to which the defense of insanity has been carried in homicide cases has induced nu...
This Comment addresses the present gap in insanity-defense laws created by the defense’s abolition a...
Legal insanity is an element of many legal systems, and it has often stirred debate. It appears that...
The 1982 Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) verdict in the trial of John Hinckley, Jr., would-b...
The jury\u27s decision in John Hinckley\u27s trial following his attempted assassination of Presiden...
With the enactment of the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984, sweeping changes were wrought in the ...
It is hard for lawyers and doctors to see eye to eye on the fundamental problem of how to eliminate ...
This paper provides a “first principles” analysis of the role and application of the insanity defenc...