A callous, manipulative psychopath convicted of a brutal crime can
count on a long prison stint. But a judge may issue a slightly shorter
sentence if presented with a biological explanation for the criminal’s
psychopathic personality.
Supplying judges with scientific evidence about suspected brain
deficits in psychopathy led to a reduction in prison sentences from
about 14 years to 13 years, researchers report in the Aug. 17 Science.
The results come from a nationwide, online survey of state judges given
a hypothetical scenario about a psychopath convicted of what lawyers
call aggravated battery.
Judges taking the survey tended to view psychopathic criminals as
dangerous, whether or not scientific evidence was introduced, say
psychologist Lisa Aspinwall, lawyer Teneille Brown and philosopher James
Tabery, all of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. A hypothetical
psychopath in the new study got sent to the slammer for longer than the
average nine-year sentence given to non-psychopaths found guilty of
aggravated battery in real courts.
Aspinwall and her colleagues informed judges that clinicians use
psychopathy — which is not an official psychiatric diagnosis — to refer
to individuals who are impulsive, emotionally shallow, outwardly
charming, lacking in empathy or remorse, chronic liars and callous
manipulators (SN: 12/9/06, p. 379). Judges were told that psychopathy is incurable.
But any tendency toward reduced sentences for psychopathic convicts
in a survey would be weaker in actual courtrooms where judges hear
evidence contested by prosecutors and defense attorneys, says
psychologist Jennifer Skeem of the University of California, Irvine.
“It is premature to apply neuroscience on psychopathy to decisions about criminal responsibility and sentencing,” Skeem says.
It’s hard to know whether defense attorneys could win reduced prison
sentences for actual psychopathic offenders by introducing brain
evidence, Tabery acknowledges. Even in the new 19-state survey, evidence
about biological contributions to psychopathy led to substantially
reduced sentences in two states (Utah and Maryland), slightly reduced or
unchanged sentences in six states and slightly increased sentences in
three states (Colorado, New York and Tennessee). The remaining eight
states included too few participants to determine statewide trends.
“No one knows if real-world sentencing of psychopathic defendants
works as it does in this study, or even whether most judges consider
psychopathy when imposing sentences,” says lawyer and psychologist
Stephen Morse of the University of Pennsylvania Law School in
Philadelphia.
Aspinwall’s group can’t say whether psychological or social
explanations for a psychopath’s crime would affect sentencing decisions
as much as biological evidence did, Morse adds.
In the online study, 181 judges read a scenario in which a man beat a
store clerk with a gun during a robbery, causing brain damage to the
victim. All judges saw evidence that the criminal was a psychopath. In
addition, 90 judges received scientific findings from either the
prosecution or the defense about psychopathy’s biological roots.
Prosecutors argued that biological evidence supported a longer sentence;
defenders sought a reduced sentence.
About 87 percent of judges listed at least one factor, such as the
crime’s seriousness, as relevant to lengthening the sentence. When
judges received biological explanations of psychopathy from the defense,
the proportion taking at least one sentence-reducing factor into
account rose from around 30 percent to 66 percent.
For unclear reasons, the judges didn’t rate psychopaths as having less
free will or being less responsible after hearing evidence about brain
influences on the condition.
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