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TexasStooge wrote:O Town wrote::cry: How horrible. 2 years old! So innocent.![]()
Hope that maniac gets life in prison.
vbhoutex wrote:This is horrible and the person who did it MUST pay for what he did, mental illness or not.
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Statistics about the Insanity Defense
* Melton, Petrila, Poythress, & Slobogin have outline a number of public misperceptions regarding the insanity defense (1) that a large number of defendants use the defense, (2) that most are successful, (3) that those acquitted by reason of insanity are released upon acquittal or shortly thereafter, and (4) that these people are extremely dangerous.
* Frequency: the public estimates that the insanity defense is raised in 33% - 42.7% of cases
* In actuality, it is used approximately 0.9% of the time (9 times in 1000)
* Success: the public estimates that the success of the insanity defense is between 36% - 45% of case
* In actuality, the success rate is less than 20% of the time it is used
* It is unsuccessful more often than it is successful
* What happens to those found NGRI? A lot of jurisdictions require that the person spend at least some time in a psychiatric facility; if not automatic, many states require commitment to a psychiatric facility on grounds of mental illness, dangerousness, or both; most states do not have a limit on the amount of time that someone can be institutionalized as NGRI; how long an NGRI acquittee spends in an institution also varies by state but Steadman and colleagues found that in New York the average stay was 3 1/2 years; in New Jersey 35% of the sample were still in institutions 8 years later; in Michigan it was 9 1/2 months; in Illinois it was 17 1/2 months, however, in this sample over 70% had been found incompetent prior to trial and had spent an average of 38.4 months in institutions.
* When compared with matched felons, results are mixed and vary by jurisdiction and the time period for which they were measured; as a general statement, matched felons and NGRI acquittees appear to spend roughly the same amount of time institutionalized; NGRI acquittees are not getting out earlier nor are they being detained longer than matched felons
* How dangerous are those found NGRI? There have been no studies of dangerousness per se, but rather, studies of recidivism rates of NGRI acquittees and matched felons; these studies, in general, find that the two groups are equal or that NGRI acquittees are somewhat less likely to recidivate than are felons; number and nature of prior offenses, rather than mental illness, appears to be the most predictive factor of recidivism
Demographic Characteristics of NGRI Acquittees
o The NGRI acquittee usually is a seriously disturbed and marginalized member of society
o the modal NGRI acquittee is a white single male in his late 20's or early 30's with a history of previous hospitalization and/or arrest; unemployed and lacks a grade 12 education; is typically psychotic and tends to have committed a non-violent crime.
* NGRI acquittees are detained for highly variable lengths of time; but, generally more serious charges result in longer post-acquittal hospitalizations
* While the average length of detention is sometimes less than that of matched felon groups, there is great variability across jurisdictions
* the re-arrest rates of NGRI acquittees have been found to range from 9.6% to 65%
* when compared to matched felons, NGRIs tend to recidivate in roughly equal proportions
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