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By CHARLES ANZALONE Contributing Editor
Charles Patrick Ewing, the UB Law School professor considered one of
the country’s leading experts on the insanity defense, takes
readers into the minds of David Berkowitz, John Wayne Gacy and other
notorious murderers in his new book of chilling insights into some of
the most well-known murder trials in recent memory.
 |  Charles Patrick Ewings new book
delves into the personal background and legal maneuvering of court cases
involving such well-known murderers as David Berkowitz and John Wayne
Gacy.
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Ewing, a SUNY Distinguished Service Professor and forensic
psychologist, uncovers rich personal histories and intricate trial
details of murderers who have become household names in “Insanity:
Murder, Madness, and the Law” (Oxford University Press, 2008).
In it, Ewing debunks the public’s and legal profession’s
enduring stereotypes surrounding the insanity defense.
“Every time a defendant pleads insanity, the case makes
headlines,” says Ewing, whose previous book, “Minds on
Trial,” is considered a landmark study of the criminally insane
defense. “In those rare instances in which a defendant is actually
found insane, the public is usually outraged. “In homicide
cases, especially, they believe that the defendant ‘got away with
murder.’” Drawing on personal evaluations of hundreds
of defendants and extensive research, Ewing conveys the psychological
and legal drama of 10 landmark insanity cases. At the same time, he
challenges misconceptions made by the general public and many in the
legal community. “I know from experience and research that
the defense is rarely raised, rarely applicable and even more rarely
successful,” Ewing says. “And when it does succeed, the
defendant usually loses his or her liberty for many years, sometimes for
life.” Ewing’s recently released book delves into the
personal background and legal maneuvering of murder cases that have
become household names. His 10 case studies include “Son of
Sam” killer David Berkowitz; John Wayne Gacy, who killed at least 30
boys and young men and buried most in a small crawlspace beneath his
Chicago home; and Andrea Yates, a mentally ill Texas mother who drowned
her five children in the family’s bathtub. Ewing’s
narrative begins with the case of George Fitzsimmons, an Amherst, N.Y.,
man who killed his parents with karate chops in 1969. After he was found
not guilty by reason of insanity, Fitzsimmons was released from Buffalo
Psychiatric Center and moved to Pennsylvania to live with his elderly
aunt and uncle. A few years later, in 1973, Fitzsimmons killed them,
stabbing them 34 times. He was awaiting sentencing for assaulting his
wife when his final attack occurred. Since then, the name
Fitzsimmons has been associated with what many people think is wrong
with the insanity defense. “Insanity: Murder, Madness, and
the Law” argues that the Fitzsimmons case was extremely rare,
particularly in today’s legal climate. Nevertheless, Ewing says,
the Fitzsimmons case shapes public and legal opinion, despite being the
exception. “In most cases, a defendant acquitted by reason
of insanity will spend more time locked up than a defendant who is found
guilty,” according to Ewing. “Being found insane almost
always results in an indeterminate—sometimes
lifetime—commitment to a secure mental hospital. And most of these
‘hospitals’ are much more like prisons than treatment
facilities.” Ewing, who has taught UB law students for
more than 25 years, often tells his class “you have to be crazy to
plead insanity.” “I mean, of course, that to
succeed with the defense, you have to have a severe mental illness and,
if you do succeed, you will likely be locked up longer than you would
have been if you were convicted.” “Insanity: Murder,
Madness, and the Law” also delves into the volatile life of Jack
Ruby, who was born Jacob Rubenstein, the man who shot and killed Lee
Harvey Oswald. Ewing calls the case that Ruby was insane
“extraordinarily weak, the expert testimony for the defense was
poorly presented and a conscientious jury would have been forced to
nullify the law” to acquit him. Ewing also profiles Andrew
Goldstein, the mentally ill man who shoved Chautauqua County resident
Kendra Webdale in front of a New York City subway train. The case, Ewing
argues, led to a legal precedent that may fundamentally alter the way
expert testimony is presented in insanity trials. “In only
two of these cases did the defense succeed, and in one of those cases it
took two trials before the defendant was finally acquitted by reason of
insanity,” Ewing writes. “As these cases also demonstrate,
the insanity defense is often pled because the defendant really has no
other defense. In a sense, the insanity defense is to criminal trials
what the ‘Hail Mary’ pass is to football.”
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