Restore the M’Naghten Rule

Daniel M’Naghten was an Englishman that suffered from paranoid delusions who thought that the Tories were going to kill him. He murdered the Prime Minister’s Secretary, Mr. Drummond and was acquitted under an insanity defense later codified in the House of Lords in 1843. This insanity defense became common law and is known as the M’Naghten Rule — a 2 prong test with the 1st prong determining whether or not the defendant knew what they were doing and the 2nd prong determining if the defendant knew what they were doing was morally ‘wrong.’  

  • Kansas adopted the M’Naghten Rule in 1884.
  • There was an assassination attempt on President Reagan in 1981.
  • John Hinckley Jr. was found not guilty by reason of insanity in 1982.
  • Kansas lawmakers abolished the M’Naghten Rule in 1996.

From Marc Rosen, “First, abolition of the insanity defense in Kansas was unwarranted. The Kansas Legislature abolished the defense because the public wanted it abolished. Yet the public was, and still is, remarkably uninformed about the actual use of the insanity defense. The public’s call for abolition was based on several misperceptions that were either empirically untrue or unjustified. Instead of educating the public on the actual use of the insanity defense, the Kansas Legislature catered to the public’s misperceptions by abolishing the defense.”

We took a narrow mens rea approach for the ‘guilty mind.’

KSA § 21-5209. It shall be a defense to a prosecution under any statute that the defendant, as a result of mental disease or defect, lacked the culpable mental state required as an element of the crime charged. Mental disease or defect is not otherwise a defense.

KSA § 21-5202. Except as otherwise provided, a culpable mental state is an essential element of every crime defined by this code. A culpable mental state may be established by proof that the conduct of the accused person was committed “intentionally,” “knowingly” or “recklessly.”

“There is a major limitation on the defendant’s ability to introduce evidence corroborating or showing the existence of a mental disease or defect. Such evidence is only admissible as it specifically relates to the requisite mens rea of the offense. Therefore, the defense cannot introduce evidence as to the existence of a mental disease or defect to litigate the defendant’s mental condition in general.”

A 2020 Harvard Review also notes “This narrow mens rea approach forbids enshrined ‘moral capacity’ argument for vulnerable minorities. In Kansas, a mentally ill defendant who lacks ‘cognitive capacity’ (who, for example, thinks the person she is killing is a hat) can argue that she lacked mens rea, but a defendant who lacks “moral capacity” (who, for example, believes she is justifiably drowning her children to save them from eternal hell) has no ‘insanity defense.’”

“Oh, but sentencing can be altered with mental health evidence,” one might say. 

Mental health evidence can typically be considered at sentencing but does not require a sentence be modified in a particular way. For sentencing guideline felony convictions it can be the basis for a downward durational or dispositional departure. Reducing the prison term or granting probation. For office grid murders it can be used for a departure from a 50 years to life prison sentence to a 25 years to life sentence. For capital murder charges it can be presented as a mitigating circumstance for a life without parole sentence as opposed to a death sentence.

There is little opportunity for treatment.  

Restore the M’Naghten Rule:

  • Broadens our insanity defense.
  • FY 2023 KDOC Report – 46% of adult inmates have mental illness.
  • We’re building a psych hospital in Wichita to add secure beds.
  • Public perceptions of individuals with mental illness are evolving.

We’re Stepping Up Together! 

Over the last 9 years 20 Kansas counties took up the Stepping Up initiative!

For my peers with mental illness going through criminal proceedings, please restore the M’Naghten Rule in Kansas.

Restoring an Insanity Defense

One of our gracious representatives gave me permission to work with a reviser on drafting a new bill this session to restore an insanity defense in Kansas and I’m so grateful to Rep. Carmichael for this opportunity to advocate for my peers with mental illness going through criminal court proceedings. When the reviser gives me that all clear, I’m introducing it into the House Judiciary Committee and hopefully, we’ll get a hearing on the bill. Cross your fingers ♥

Cedric Lofton

I’ve been deeply concerned about an incident in Wichita, Ks.

A young man, Cedric Lofton (17) was in the foster care system and experienced a mental health crisis. His foster care dad called 911, and it was believed by all that Cedric would be admitted for inpatient services, but law enforcement officers altered documentation to reflect that he would otherwise be locked up in a juvenile facility as they did not want to transfer him for care.

This young man died while in police custody and the incident was ruled a homicide. A task force was developed to find facts of the case and make recommendations, while Kansas DCF investigated Cedric’s death and I wonder as I advocate for individuals with mental illness in our criminal justice system, perhaps I could help with legislation to define and narrow ‘stand your ground’ laws in Kansas.

Mental Health Court

It’s been an emotional morning since learning yesterday that our Shawnee County District Attorney is putting a work group together to establish a mental health court in the Third Judicial District. When my kids temporarily went into state’s custody for abuse, being brought before such an awesome authority in our courts was frightening. I can’t begin to imagine what my peers with similar diagnoses are going through in criminal proceedings, but my county commissioner fully supports this necessity. He said that they would discuss funding for a mental health court in coming months and I’m a weepy, hot mess. I’m so grateful to my county commissioner and our D.A., Mr. Kagay for this effort.

Thoughts:

I learned that a defendant admitted themselves for inpatient services at a state hospital and thus, missed an offender registry appointment. As probation violations are felonies, this defendant is looking at prison time and I feel this to be unacceptable.

Probation violations should be treated as a contempt violation, so rather than making it a new crime, the courts should be enforcing prior orders.