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Article
An Examination of the Effects of Mental Disorders as Mitigating Factors on Capital Sentencing Outcomes
Behavioral Sciences & the Law
  • Lauren N. Miley, University of South Florida
  • Ellie Heiss-Moses, University of South Florida
  • John K. Cochran, University of South Florida
  • Kathleen M. Heide, University of South Florida
  • Sondra J. Fogel, University of South Florida
  • M. Dwayne Smith, University of South Florida
  • Beth J. Bejerregaard, University of North Carolina
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2020
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1002/bsl.2477
Abstract

Mentally ill and emotionally disturbed offenders comprise a significant component of those whose criminal conduct has swept them into the criminal justice system, including a subset who are tried and convicted of capital murder. The present study employs the population of capital cases advanced to penalty phase in the state of North Carolina (1990–2009) to examine whether presentation to the jury of the statutory mitigators of extreme mental and emotional disturbance and capacity impaired, and specific mental illness diagnoses, often referred to as mental disorders, at the sentencing phase mitigate against a sentence of death. Mental disorders included mood disorders, psychotic disorders, anxiety disorders, brain disorders, multiple mental illness diagnoses, learning disabilities, and personality disorders. Results from these 835 cases indicate that with the exception of one, the diagnosis of a learning disability, the capital jury's acceptance of various mental health conditions does not effectively mitigate against a capital sentence. In addition, jury rejection of a diagnosis of mental illness or the two mental health statutory mitigators, capacity impaired and extreme emotional disturbance, as a mitigating factor has a counter-mitigating effect in that it significantly increases the odds of a death penalty recommendation by about 85–200%.

Citation / Publisher Attribution

Behavioral Sciences & the Law, v. 38, issue 4, p. 381-405

Citation Information
Lauren N. Miley, Ellie Heiss-Moses, John K. Cochran, Kathleen M. Heide, et al.. "An Examination of the Effects of Mental Disorders as Mitigating Factors on Capital Sentencing Outcomes" Behavioral Sciences & the Law Vol. 38 Iss. 4 (2020) p. 381 - 405
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/sondra-fogel/77/