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5 Aust. & N.Z. J. Criminology 1 (1972)

handle is hein.journals/anzjc5 and id is 1 raw text is: 









AUST. & N.Z. JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY  (March, 1972): 5, 1


                   EDITORIAL

A RECENT   leading article entitled Psychiatry and the Dangerous offender'
is timely and the reading which it stimulated has caused us to become con-
cerned regarding a number of the double-damned; the offender consider-
ed to suffer from some psychiatric illness.
    One may  turn first to some papers published by Barker et al. in Ontario,
Canada.  One of these papers, Defence Disrupting Therapy,2 contains the
following opening remarks:
    we  are attempting  to treat severely sick persons whose legal and
    psychiatric situations could hardly be worse. Many patients are admitted
    after having been charged  with serious offences and found unfit to
    stand trial, or not guilty by reason of insanity. Where the past record
    and  present dynamics suggest . . . that murder, assault or arson will
    be likely to accompany the early stages of a subsequent relapse, their
    management   revolves around the mandate   that they are not to  be
    released until they are no more likely to burst into violence than mem-
    bers of the general public.
Then, having  described a somewhat  frightening treatment regime, one
reads
    The  (senior) author has increasing reservations about the wisdom of
    publishing this paper. On the one hand,  since it describes a rather
    radical procedure in steady use for some time it should be brought to
    the attention of the scientific community, but on the other hand the
    misuse of these drugs could be harmful in situations where the stakes
    are not so high as they seem to be for those incarcerated as 'criminally
    insane'.
It is important to note that the patients Barker et al. are speaking of are
not clear cut or florid psychotics and they write3
    the patient . . . enters the hospital with a relatively calm exterior and
    an abundance  of social graces, enabling him to convince himself and
    other patients that 'he needs no treatment . . .' These persons are
    seriously ill in a special way, and we think that for such a person to
    have the intense chaos of his disturbance made more obviously apparent,
    both to himself and to others, has clear treatment advantages.
    It is stated4 that the insane criminal needs psychiatric aid and to a
quite considerable extent insanity in this setting relates to the concept of
exceedingly dangerous. This point of view is expressed when one reads5
    The  general public probably still believes that a strong link exists


 1. Leading Article (1972) Med.J.Aust. i 1.
 2. Barker, E. T., Mason, M. H. and Wilson, J. (1969) Canad. Psychiat. Ass. J. 14 355.
 3. Ibid.
 4. Barker, E. T. and Mason, M. H. (1968) Buber Behind Bars Canad. Psychiat. Ass. J. 13 61.
 5. Leading Article (1972) Med.J.Aust. i 1.


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