Insanity on Trial

Caldwell, Christopher

Insanity on Trial Andrea Yates was insane, and everybody knew it. BY CHRISTOPHER CALDWELL SHORTLY AFTER she was sent to Harris County Jail to await trial for drowning her five children in a...

...Yates's lawyers would have been allowed to pick their preferred option...
...In the 1950s and '60s, insanity could be claimed by any who showed their deed to be a "product of mental illness...
...In 1999, he killed his second wife and his 3-year-old son...
...M'Naghten holds that insanity can be claimed in a courtroom only by those who, at the time of their misdeed, could not tell right from wrong...
...Their decision to convict Yates of murder, rather than rule her not guilty by reason of insanity, has given rise to accusations from columnist Richard Cohen that witch trials are Christopher Caldwell is a senior editor at THE WEEKLY STANDARD...
...The others, including Texas, have reverted under various formulations to the M'Naghten rule...
...Criminal-justice intellectuals like to snicker at jurors who think of the insanity defense as an easy out...
...When Yates's attorney asked one of the crime-scene policemen: "Weren't those five bodies in absolute stark contrast to everything else we saw in that house...
...Many mothers could imagine going a little stir-crazy in a house alone with five small children, day after day...
...Having five children struck some feminist writers as incitement to murder in the first place...
...But the Andrea Yates verdict rests on a kind of jury nullification...
...Yates's shrink Eileen Starbranch noted: "Apparently [patient] and husband plan to have as many babies as nature will allow...
...Since the birth of her first child, she had heard voices that she associated with Satan telling her to kill her children with a knife...
...And it produced a nudge-nudge, wink-wink application of the law, revealing that common sense and legal statutes have been driven dangerously asunder...
...Yates called 911 and told the police to come over, prosecutors noted...
...As the Washington Post put it, "Wilson emphasized that killing the children in an hour, as Yates did after her husband left for work and before her mother-in-law came for her daily visit, was not the work of a psychotic with jumbled thoughts...
...Prosecutors have a duty to protect us from such people...
...These worries tell only one side of the story...
...Harris County assistant district attorney Joe owmby admitted right off the bat that "there's no question Andrea Yates had some form of mental illness...
...It is just such "folk" concepts of sanity that Texas jurors were exercising when they decided to reject the insanity defense...
...That Andrea Yates knew her actions would be perceived as wrong does not mean she had a meaningful sense that they were wrong...
...Such jurors seem not to realize that those acquitted as insane actually spend more time in mental institutions than those guilty of murder spend in jails, according to the American Psychiatric Association...
...As Bob Herbert put it in an excellent column after the murders: "Suddenly the nation has a mass killer it can empathize with, identify with, care for, even love...
...But the way they did it in the Yates case corroded the justice system by fostering cynicism among jurors, writing into precedent a phony understanding of how the human mind works, and making the law less intelligible and less compelling to those who live under it...
...Take the Paul Harrington case, for instance, which many of them had probably discussed around the water cooler at work...
...She had been diagnosed with—and hospitalized for—psychosis, schizophrenia, severe post-partum depression, and a frontal-lobe brain disorder...
...She had attempted suicide twice...
...The ultimate outcome—life incarceration, no possibility of parole, with psychological care—will strike many Americans (including this writer) as fair...
...Although the Yates case had initially spurred sympathy for sufferers of post-partum depression, Trafford noted, "now a backlash is setting in...
...There have been attempts to produce more flexible guidelines...
...But the question is not whether Yates was "a little stir-crazy...
...Prosecutors were seeking to kill Andrea Yates because they pretended to think she wasn't insane...
...The height of feminist absurdity was reached last August when Abigail Trafford, in a Washington Post op-ed, derided the NASA community as "Mommyville, USA...
...That is nothing to be scoffed at...
...She was grappling with Heaven and Hell...
...Both of them were wrong...
...in fact it's something to be glad of...
...Park Dietz of UCLA, a longtime prosecution rent-a-witness in such trials, said Yates probably didn't really think she was saving her children from Hell because "she doesn't tell them they'll be with Jesus or God...
...Feminist skepticism about any stereotypical "maternal instinct"—in the context of which Yates's behavior appears even more insane—weakens a child-murderer's ability to use the insanity defense, of course, but that's a topic for another article...
...They wound up undermining her insanity defense, even as they thought they were promoting it...
...And they pretended to think this not because they questioned NOW's assertion that the murders were the act of an overtaxed housewife, but because they accepted it...
...But they had help...
...It is evidence that the defendant is hearing voices, which she takes to be either divine or Satanic, taunting her with the words of Matthew 18:6, Mark 9:42, or—in the version most open to misread-ing—Luke 17:2: "It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones...
...This may have been a bad decision in Yates's case—but the exclamation point indicates that Starbranch saw it as an unpardonable eccentricity in general...
...a place where the children are small, support is scarce, husbands are mainly absent and responsibility is overwhelming...
...The term of art for this type of reasoning is jury nullification...
...But in this case, the APA might have been wrong...
...the policeman replied, "I would have to say yes...
...But he and other prosecutors sought to show that the voices she was hearing had done nothing to impair her sense of right and wrong...
...They called Harry Wilson, a pediatric pathologist, to do a blood-and-guts reenact-ment of the sort prosecutors always assume will impress juries...
...A full month into her incarceration, despite regular 15-milligram doses of the potent anti-psychotic Haldol, she was still seeing hallucinations of horses on the prison walls...
...Four states have abolished them altogether, and a dozen more have introduced the verdict of "guilty but insane...
...The prosecution disingenuously blurred the distinction between insanity and stupidity...
...had sent her a message from Satan: "You have eluded me long enough...
...Her craziness had everything to do with the murders she committed...
...When Katie Couric famously aired the number for Yates's defense fund, and announced that money left over would be given to mental-health charities, her spokesperson dippily told the Washington Post, "I don't see how it would suggest that NBC is agreeing or supporting" the insanity defense...
...There but for abortion, day care, and secular humanism go I. There has never been a better illustration of feminism's degeneration into a populist movement for the privileged classes...
...Backlash against what...
...They placed Yates on a continuum with housewives everywhere...
...In this, feminists were quite confused...
...Andrea Yates had bigger fish to fry than seeing a psychiatrist," said psychologist Xavier Amador, who has treated women who have killed their children...
...She was convinced a character in the movie O Brother, Where Art Thou...
...Capital murder has only two punishments in Texas: death and life in prison...
...Feminists, who were the most vocal participants in interpreting the Yates trial to the public, had their own axe to grind...
...BY CHRISTOPHER CALDWELL SHORTLY AFTER she was sent to Harris County Jail to await trial for drowning her five children in a bathtub, Houston housewife Andrea Yates asked a psychiatrist to shave her head so she could see if the number 666 was still printed on her skull...
...So what happened to make the jury decide as it did...
...But since John Hinckley's acquittal on insanity grounds for trying to kill President Reagan in 1981, states have borne down hard on insanity claims...
...Those who think God is commanding them don't await a second opinion from the Houston police department...
...One local psychiatrist told the I Houston Chronicle that he did not believe Yates would have been considered dangerous...
...And those who have had an episode of postpartum depression would know the depth of Andrea Yates's pain...
...Suzanne O'Mal-ley of the New York Times thought early on that Yates's husband Rusty, a NASA engineer, had "nudged his wife over the edge," particularly because he "had fathered a fifth child...
...Against a woman's right to kill her kids...
...Under the circumstances, the jury was simply not ready to surrender its right to dispose of the case...
...It was obtained by the willingness of a merciless prosecution to seek the death penalty, and thus to risk involving the state in killing a mentally deranged woman...
...Folk con- And' cepts of sanity and insanity [have] probably played more of a role than the official concepts...
...And if committed, Yates would have had to have her commitment reauthorized year by year...
...This sounds like a sick joke, but it is not...
...But this is not evidence of "criminal intent," as any reasonable person would understand it...
...Ergo, they reasoned, she knew right from wrong...
...The insanity defense, in the minds of jurors, adds a third possibility: throwing the murderer's fate into the lap of some cre-dentialed ignoramus from Harvard Medical School who may decide to release Andrea Yates into the neighborhood where their children play...
...According to Stanford law professor Lawrence M. Friedman, the M'Naghten test of right and wrong is "at bottom, nothing but words, which a judge can read or recite to a jury...
...The prosecution seemed to understand this, because it also made very nearly the opposite claim: that Yates was proved insane by her failure to obey some Unwritten Rulebook of Religious Psychos...
...What happened in the Yates trial was that a "guilty but insane" verdict was engineered by an obdurate prose- cution and abetted by jury nullification...
...She admitted she expected to be punished...
...Texas's version descends from the 1843 M'Naghten Rule, named for the Scottish psychotic who murdered an aide to British prime minister Sir Robert Peel during a bungled assassination attempt...
...She thought the news networks had put cameras in her house to monitor her performance as a mother...
...What is noteworthy in this context is the way feminists cast Yates's behavior: as an understandable (if extreme) reaction to the oppression of normal bourgeois family life...
...Harrington, a Detroit policeman, was found not guilty by reason of insanity after killing his wife and children in 1975...
...He was released after two months, when it was determined he posed no threat to anyone...
...That wasn't her only problem...
...The insanity defense has a long history...
...In his 1995 study of juror behavior, Commonsense Justice, Georgetown psychology professor Norman J. Finkel wrote that some jurors faced with insanity pleas "may reach a verdict 'backward': that is, they first decide whether they want to see the defendant in prison or in a psychiatric hospital, and then decide which verdict is likely to achieve that outcome...
...Under Texas law, had Yates been acquitted by reason of insanity, the decision on whether to commit her to a mental facility would have been made by either the judge or a brand new jury...
...What's more, prosecutor Karlynn Williford made the implicit claim—in the face of everything we know about Andrea Yates's conduct as a mother—that this was a long-hatched premeditated murder, grilling a psychiatrist with a question, "Do you recall her saying, After thinking about my options, I decided drowning them was the best way to end their lives...
...it's whether she was crazy...
...Yates's competence as a mother would seem to be independent of her psychosis—but "women's advocates" didn't see it that way...
...They ignore the very real possibility that, had she been acquitted, a violently insane woman could have found herself back on the street in short order...
...The only part of its case that the prosecution believed, in fact, was that Andrea Yates ought to be locked up for a long, long time...
...One assumes that hostility to the insanity defense would be the mark of "right wing" forces, like the Texas judiciary system...
...Her being a born-again Christian and a home-schooler made her even more appealing as a symbol...
...The prosecution clearly did not believe its own case for Yates's sanity, for it made no argument for capital punishment in the sentencing phase of the trial...
...There was thus a chance she could have gone free—and soon...
...This was highly implausible...
...The evidence of mental unfitness presented at her murder trial this spring would run to 1,000 pages...
...And when NOW rightly condemned the decision of Harris County prosecutors to seek the death penalty, it did so on the wrong grounds...
...While the Harris County prosecutors pretended not to believe this, it is hard to see how 12 jurors could have thought otherwise...
...Aside from her final murderous act, Andrea Yates was by all accounts a generous soul and a wonderful mother...
...Andrea Yates, who was sentenced to life in prison on March 15, was crazy as a loon...
...No, it was the work of a psychotic with tragically clear thoughts...
...back, and to European declarations that Texas is collapsing into barbarism...

Vol. 7 • March 2002 • No. 27


 
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