Abnormal Psychology

(やまだぃちぅ) #1

Ethical and Legal Issues 729


Dangerousness: Legal Consequences


Andrew Goldstein’s attack on Kendra Webdale wasn’t the fi rst time he had engaged


in dangerous behavior, and his dangerous behavior wasn’t a secret.


In the two years before Kendra Webdale was instantly killed on the tracks, Andrew
Goldstein attacked at least 13 other people. The hospital staff members who kept
treating and discharging Goldstein knew that he repeatedly attacked strangers in pub-
lic places.
He was hospitalized after assaulting a psychiatrist at a Queens clinic. [The clinic
note from November 14, 1997, reads]: “Suddenly, without any warning, patient springs
up and attacks one of [the] doctors, pushing her into a door and then onto the fl oor.
He was hospitalized after threatening a woman, [again] after attacking two strangers
at a Burger King [and yet again] after fi ghting with an apartment mate.” [A note from
March 2, 1998, says]: “Broke down roommate’s door because he could not control the
impulse.” And particularly chilling, six months before Kendra Webdale’s death, he was
hospitalized for striking another woman he did not know on a New York subway.
(Winerip, 1999a)

Goldstein’s history indicates that he had become dangerous. Dangerousness, a legal


term, refers to someone’s potential to harm self or others. Determining whether


someone is dangerous, in this sense, rests on assessing threats of violence to self


Key Concepts and Facts About Criminal Actions and Insanity



  • Various tests have been used to determine whether a defendant
    is insane. The first was the M’Naghten test in 1843, followed
    by the irresistible impulse test. After almost 70 years came the
    Durham test. Many states presently use the American Legal In-
    stitute (ALI) test, which requires either impaired knowledge that
    the behavior was wrong (cognition) or impaired capacity to re-
    sist the impulse to act illegally (volition). The Insanity Defense
    Reform Acts of the 1980s did away with the volition element to
    determine insanity in federal courts.

  • Two issues are still to be clarified by the courts: (1) whether
    someone who is legally insane must have known that the act was
    “wrong” versus “illegal” and (2) whether insanity depends on
    knowing in the abstract that an act is wrong versus knowing that
    the specifi c behavior is wrong in the particular circumstance.

  • To assess insanity, a jury may rely on testimony about the defen-
    dant’s mental state during the time leading up to the crime, the
    defendant’s history of mental illness prior to the crime, and tes-
    timony or reports from expert witnesses about the defendant’s
    mental state or mental illness.

  • Mental health clinicians may assess a defendant’s sanity
    through interviews with the person, psychological tests and
    questionnaires, and interviews with family members and
    friends. However, such measures may be affected by the de-
    fendant’s experiences in jail, medications he or she may be
    taking, the decision to plead not guilty by reason of insanity
    (NGBI), reactions to the crime, coaching from the defendant’s
    lawyer or other inmates, and the way the defendant responds
    to various assessment methods. But none of this information


necessarily indicates the defendant’s mental state at the time
of the crime.


  • Some states offer alternatives to the insanity defense, including
    those of diminished capacity and guilty but mentally ill.

  • Research indicates that acquittal on the basis of the insanity de-
    fense is extremely rare, particularly when the decision is made
    by a jury rather than a judge.

  • Competency to stand trial addresses the defendant’s mental
    state before the trial and whether the defendant is competent
    to participate in his or her own defense; someone who is not
    competent to stand trial would also be deemed not compe-
    tent to plead guilty and not competent to waive the right to an
    attorney.


Making a Determination



  • Do you think that Andrew Goldstein was insane, according to the
    legal defi nition (cognition or volition), at the time of the crime?
    Specifi cally, how did you arrive at your decision? If you would
    like more information to determine whether he was legally in-
    sane, what information—specifi cally—would you want, and in
    what ways would the information infl uence your decision?

  • Reread Case 16.2 about Colin Ferguson, and determine whether
    or not he should have been deemed competent (to stand trial
    and to waive counsel). Specifi cally, how did you arrive at your de-
    cision? If you would like more information to determine whether
    he was legally competent, what information—specifically—
    would you want, and in what ways would the information infl u-
    ence your decision?


Dangerousness
The legal term that refers to someone’s
potential to harm self or others.
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