Temporary Insanity

Covey on the Defense of Temporary Insanity

Russell D. Covey (Georgia State University College of Law) has posted Temporary Insanity: The Strange Life and Times of the Perfect Defense (Boston University Law Review, Vol. 91, 2011) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
The temporary insanity defense has a prominent place in the mythology of criminal law. Because it seems to permit factually guilty defendants to escape both punishment and institutionalization, some imagine it as the “perfect defense.” In fact, the defense has been invoked in a dizzying variety of contexts and, at times, has proven highly successful. Successful or not, the temporary insanity defense has always been accompanied by a storm of controversy, in part because it is often most successful in cases where the defendant’s basic claim is that honor, revenge, or tragic circumstance – not mental illness in its more prosaic forms – compelled the criminal act. Given that the insanity defense is considered paradigmatic of excuse defenses, it is puzzling that temporary insanity also functions as a sort of justification defense.
This Article seeks to solve that puzzle by canvassing the colorful history and the conceptual function of the defense. Ultimately, it argues that temporary insanity should be viewed as an equitable doctrine that provides relief where the traditional legal rules exclude or are inadequate to the defendant’s particular circumstances. Because the temporary insanity defense permits juries to resolve difficult cases in a manner consistent with the deep purposes of the criminal law, it is misleading to conceptualize that defense as merely a nullification doctrine.
November 3, 2011 | Permalink

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About tcbdefense

I am a criminal defense lawyer certified by the Illinois Supreme Court as lead counsel in death penalty cases. In addition to 30 years in the practice of criminal law and extensive trial work, I have had exceptional appellate court experience. I have also had the distinct opportunity to orally present arguments and issues to both the Illinois Appellate and Supreme Courts. I have authored over two-hundred briefs and appeared in every appellate district in Illinois as well as the Seventh and Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. His expertise includes all areas of criminal defense and appellate practice. I have received an AV rating from Martindale-Hubbell, their highest attorney rating. I have been recognized by Leading Lawyers Network as a preeminent attorney in the field of Criminal Appellate Law.
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