Insanity
Two major trials kicking off 2015 feature defendants
invoking the insanity defense. For many, this adds to the myth that insanity is
commonly used and frequently successful.
But in fact, the insanity defense is raised in less than 1% of felony cases, and it's only successful in a
fraction of those. Moreover, defendants judged to have been legally insane at
the time of the offense and subsequently found not guilty by reason of insanity
are in almost all cases indefinitely committed to psychiatric hospitals for
treatment.
Statistically speaking, for those who want to see some
guilty verdicts in the trials of James Holmes or Eddie Routh, they are likely
to get their wish.
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