Title: Forensic Psychiatry
1Forensic Psychiatry
2What is forensic psychiatry?
- Forensic psychiatry is a branch of medicine which
focuses on the interface of law and mental
health. - It may include psychiatric consultation in a wide
variety of legal matters - expert testimony
- clinical work with perpetrators and victims.
3What is a forensic psychiatrist?
- A psychiatrist is a medical doctor (M.D. or D.O.
in the U.S.) who has completed several years of
additional training in the understanding,
diagnosis, and treatment of mental disorders. - A forensic psychiatrist is a psychiatrist who has
additional training and/or experience related to
the various interfaces of mental health (or
mental illness) with the law.
4Forensic psychiatrist vs Forensic psychologist
- Psychiatrists are physicians with specialty
training in the understanding, diagnosis, and
treatment of mental disorders. - This includes
- biological evaluations and treatments
- (such as laboratory tests and medications)
- psychotherapy, and family social issues.
- Doctoral-level psychologists do not go to medical
school, - Have special expertise in topics not usually
studied in detail by psychiatrists (such as
psychological testing).
5How is forensic psychiatry useful to the legal
process?
- When legal matters involve issues outside lay
(general public) expertise, lawyers and judges
regularly seek consultation from professionals in
a wide variety of fields, including medical
specialties. - Such professionals are often called "experts" or
"expert witnesses." - Forensic experts usually are truly knowledgeable,
the criteria for "expert" designation in such
cases are legal ones, and not necessarily
scientific. - Sometimes the expertise is sought in an effort to
provide the best possible information to judges
or juries, but there are many other situations in
which a prudent attorney, judge, or other party
may request consultation.
6Are forensic psychiatrists "advocates" for one
side or the other in legal matters?
- Usually not.
- Ethical forensic psychiatrists try to avoid bias.
- They focus on the data or evidence within their
areas of expertise, and comment objectively on
the information as they see it. - Are often consultants to advocates (lawyers) or
courts, and at other times may participate in
advocacy strategy, but consider it unethical to
combine our expert opinions (testimony, reports,
or affidavits, for example) with advocacy per se.
- Ethical forensic psychiatrists do not accept
contingency fees or otherwise conduct themselves
in ways that may interfere with, or imply, a lack
of professional objectivity.
7Doesnt the expert have an incentive to agree
with the lawyer, so he or she can testify and
make money?
- In most cases, no.
- Ethical experts are paid for their time, not
their testimony. - Since the time spent forming the opinion usually
far exceeds time spent testifying, most payment
is received regardless of whether or not the
expert testifies. - Forensic psychiatrists are similar to most other
professionals in their respect for their work and
their clients. The minority who "cheat" in some
way risk severe censure and loss of credibility.
8What Does a Forensic Psychiatrist Do?
- Most forensic psychiatrists don't specialize in
criminal matters. - The word "forensic" refers to anything that has
to do with the law. - Forensic psychiatrists thus may be involved with
- criminal matters
- civil litigation (such as malpractice lawsuits)
- competence to do things (like make a will,
consent to medical care, or take care of
children) - child custody
- treating and working with mentally ill people who
get in trouble with the law - helping victims of crimes
- helping lawyers and judges understand the
psychological aspects of their cases.
9Here are three things they are not
- (1) We're not lawyers. We may work with lawyers,
or try to understand the legal aspects of the
matter we're working on, but our job is to be
good doctors who can translate what we know into
something useful for the legal system, not to be
lawyers ourselves. - (A few forensic psychiatrists and psychologists
have law degrees as well as medical ones. In my
view, those folks usually do best when they pick
one role or the other.) - (2) We're not judges. We don't interpret the law
or tell judges or juries how they should rule.
Most of the time, psychiatric issues are only a
small part of the entire legal matter being
considered. Sometimes we're asked to give an
opinion about those psychiatric issues, but
that's to help the judge or jury decide, not to
tell them what to do. - (3) We're not cops. We aren't the folks who
protect the community, deal with dangerous or
criminal situations, or contain the bad guys.
That's not our area of expertise, and nobody
gives us permission to do it anyway.
10Stalking
"Even if I did do this, it would have to have
been because I loved her very much, right?"
- OJ Simpson
11Do Now
- Is stalking socially acceptable?
Eight million American women -- or one in 12
will be a victim of stalking at some point in
their lives. -Kristin Ohlson
12Well Is It?
"The Lloyd Dobler Effect". Emily, like me, is a
crazy fan of John's, specifically of his Lloyd
Dobler role in Say Anything
13What is Stalking ?
- a set of "behaviors that last more than two weeks
and involves repeated and persistent attempts to
impose on another person unwanted contacts and/or
communications which induce fear or distress." - -Paul Mullen, M.D.
He always told me he would make me sorry, I
never dreamed he would do it by killing our
child.
14Who is doing the Stalking ?
- ____ of the stalkers were male
- ____ of the stalkers were ex partners of the
victims - ____ had some form of relationship with the
victim - Who is stalked the most??
- ex-partners professional relationship,
fellow employees, - customers casual acquaintances
- the stalkers who assaulted were most likely to be
____? -
- -(Mullen, Pathe, Purcell, Stuart, 1999 1244)
15Who is doing the Stalking ?
- 79 of the stalkers were male
- 30 of the stalkers were ex partners of the
victims - 86 had some form of relationship with the
victim, - including ex-partners (36),
- professional relationship (23)
- fellow employees or customers (11)
- casual acquaintances (19)
- 36 (52) of the stalkers attacked their victims,
14 involved sexual assault - the stalkers who assaulted were most likely to be
rejected ex partners. - (Mullen, Pathe, Purcell, Stuart, 1999 1244)
16According to a 1998 study by the Department of
Justice.
- 8 of women will be stalked in their lifetime
- Women
- aged 18 to 35 (11)
- aged 36 to 55 (8 )
- 56 or older (4)
- -Paul Mullen, M.D., at APAs 2001
- 2 of men will be stalked in their lifetime
- Men
- ages of 18 and 35 (8)
- aged 36 to 55 (4)
- aged 56 and older (3),
- Professor of forensic psychiatry at Monash
University in Victoria, Australia.
17Do Now
- In what ways can stalkers communicate with their
victims?
I have to eliminate what I cannot obtain.
Bardo,in a letter to his sister Later he killed
Rebecca Schaeffer
18Do Now Answers
- In what ways can stalkers communicate with their
victims? - telephone, e-mail, fax, letters, notes, gifts
- Attempt to be physically close to the victim by
approaching, following, surveilling, and
loitering near that person
19Do Now 11/12What might concern you about this
letter?
20How might you describe the stalkers profile?
He always told me he would make me sorry, I
never dreamed he would do it by killing our
child.
21How might you describe the stalkers profile?
- Usually an isolated and shy person , May be
unemployed - Social Failure one who lives alone, lacks any
type of important intimate relationship - Narcissistic personality disorder and very low
self-esteem. - The stalker feels that they're the most important
person in the world." - Many people stalk someone they have only met
briefly - Someone they don't really know, or barely know.
22What are Mullens Five Categories of Stalkers
23Mullens Five Categories of Stalkers
241. The Rejected Suitor
- Sometimes a partner rejected by their spouse or
lover may vacillate between overtures of
reconciliation and revenge. They have a
narcissistic sense of entitlement and belief this
is the only relationship they are going to have. - More than 80 of rejected stalkers in Mullens
study had personality disorders. - Therapeutic treatment of the rejected stalker
involves helping him or her come to terms with
the end of the relationship.
252. The Intimacy Seeker
- The intimacy-seeking stalker intends to establish
a relationship with his "true love" regardless of
her wishes. - More than half of the intimacy seekers Mullen
evaluated were delusional, believing that their
love was reciprocated, and nearly a third had a
personality disorder and a delusion that their
quest would be ultimately successful. - Legal actions do not work well with intimacy
seekers, who may justify their behavior with the
belief they must pay a price for true love. - The court may order treatment, which should focus
on treating their delusions or other mental
disorders.
263. The Incompetent Suitor
- This type is typically a man who had been
rebuffed after asking a woman for a date. - Hes often socially inept, and when rejected,
begins to stalk with the hope that his persistent
behavior will change the womans mind. - The incompetent suitors can be responsive to
judicial sanctions but are also likely to relapse.
274. The Resentful Stalker
- These offenders express anger in response to a
perception that they have been humiliated or
treated unfairly by the object of their
obsession. - They thrive on having a sense of power and
control over the victim, and are hard to treat
because they often see themselves as the victim.
285. The Predatory Stalker
- Predator plans their attack, rehearses it, has
lots of sexual fantasies about it. - Derives pleasure from gathering information about
the target and fantasizing about the assault. - Doesn't necessarily know the victim.
- The victim may not know she is being stalked.
- They often have prior convictions as sexual
deviants.
29Lets see whos a stalker..
I love you
30Do Now
- Why might a person stalk a celebrity?
From todays headlines http//abcnews.go.com/Ente
rtainment/wireStory?id6237229
Know this Commercial? Is Stalking acceptable??
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmhehKgU5oBs
Burger King Stalker
31Do Now
- Why might a person stalk a celebrity?
From todays headlines http//abcnews.go.co
m/Entertainment/story?id6241069page1
32Do Now ANSWER
- Why might a person stalk a celebrity?
- may focus on a celebrity, especially if they've
seen him or her in person at a public appearance
like a concert. - Develop a relationship through viewing
- Learn about their family and who they are from TV
or Radio - "They develop convoluted thoughts about this
person. - They feel this person is the answer to their
dreams,"
33Looking inside the letters
34Two Questions1. Why did we leave off the
Predatory Stalkers?2. Predict which stalker is
the most to be concerned about causing harm?
From Jack Jordan
35Why did we leave off the Predatory Stalkers ?
Threats () Assaults ()
Rejected Suitor 71 54
Intimacy Seeking 50 23
Incompetent Suitor 32 27
Resentful Stalker 87 25
Predatory Stalker 33 50
36Predict which is the most to be concerned about?
- The rejected and predatory stalkers are most
likely to assault their victims.
37When to Be Concerned
- The red flags
- You immediately start getting several phone calls
or emails right after meeting this person. - The person is clingy, controlling, or upset if
you want to spend time with friends and family.
Marlon Pagtakhan stalked Jerry Ryan
38How to Take action
- Tell everyone you know that this is going on --
your employer, friends, family. - Gently but firmly tell the person you've decided
to move on. - Don't get drawn into discussions of why. Just
say, "This situation isn't right for me" or "I'm
not ready.." -- whatever you need to say, but say
it gently.
39Treatments for Victims
- Mullen has found that cognitive-behavioral
therapy works well in managing the anxiety
stalking victims experience. - Medications such as SSRIs for some patients.
- "It is important to inform and educate family
members about the stalking and enlist their help
in managing it," he stated.
40Treatments for Victims
- Stressed that victims of stalking, like victims
of sexual or physical abuse, often blame
themselves for the situation. - Because they feel shame or misplaced guilt, they
do not share their ordeal with others and become
more isolated and afraid - Counseling the victim to realize that he or she
is not responsible for the stalking. - Advises victims to file a complaint with the
police if the stalking episodes continue for more
than two weeks. - "To prove that the perpetrator is guilty of a
crime and have the court order treatment,
evidence is critical. Do not destroy
answering-machine tapes, notes, letters, e-mails,
or gifts in a moment of distress," he advised
41Professionals at Risk, What about the victims?
- "Professionals who work with the lonely and
unstable are at risk of being stalked," said
Mullen. - Estimated that about 15 percent have been stalked
by a patient during their career. - Victims are often forced to alter their lives to
avoid the stalker. - Mullens study found
- 53 of his subjects quit or changed jobs
- 40 moved to a different home
- 70 curtailed social activities.
42Professionals at Risk, What about the victims?
- In addition to the physical dangers, stalking
takes a severe psychological toll on its victims.
- 83 Subjects were diagnosed with an anxiety
disorder - 37 with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
- Additional 18 had PTSD symptoms but did not meet
formal diagnostic criteria. - 24 had ideas of suicide
- 25 percent increased their alcohol consumption
and/or cigarette smoking
43-END
44Pics