You're Wrong About - The Insanity Defense with Mackenzie Joy Brennan

Episode Date: August 19, 2025

What do John Hinckley Jr. and a jazz age tuberculosis patient have in common? Legal correspondent ​​Mackenzie Joy Brennan takes Sarah through some of the strange cases that helped make—and break...—the insanity defense in America. Our story includes a woman who carried her (alleged) victims’ bodies around in a suitcase, and the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan—carried out with the intention of impressing a young Jodie Foster.More Mackenzie Joy Brennan:http://www.mkzjoybrennan.comMore You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merchYWA on InstagramSarah's other show, You Are GoodSupport the show

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Like, broadly speaking, if you're an American woman and you're not insane in the 1920s and 30s, then, like, you're not aware of what's going on. Joi Brennan. McKenzie was last with us for our episode. Has the Supreme Court always been this terrible? Mackenzie is a lawyer and legal analyst and would like to tell us that since we last talked, the Supreme Court has also shown us that it can get even more terrible. So we should also probably have her back on to talk about that too. But in the meantime, this episode really does have so many stories within it. A Great Depression-era woman, facing off against the electric chair, Jody Foster, and of course, Ronald Reagan. McKenzie is also joining us for an upcoming bonus episode. I can't wait. And if you haven't
Starting point is 00:01:14 listened to our bonus episodes, you should check them out sometime. We have had some really fun stuff lately, including a discussion of beyond belief, fact or fiction with Chelsea Weber Smith and a conversation about Bigfoot, my favorite cryptid, with our inconvenient mammal correspondent, Lulu Miller. And that's your introduction. This is a law episode. It's a history episode. We're so happy to share these stories with you and to keep on learning about the legal world, which tries to make us feel dumb so we don't notice what people are up to. but with a little bit of vocabulary and with a great guest like McKenzie, we can learn to understand the world we're in. And let's go do it together.
Starting point is 00:02:10 Welcome to your wrong about the podcast where we talk about topics that you grow up hearing on law and order, my great joy and dream. And with me today is our legal. correspondent, or Conlaw correspondent, I believe actually, McKenzie Brennan, to talk to us about the insanity defense. I'm so excited about this and I'm really glad to be doing it together because it is a wild ride as the name would suggest and a lot of angry people at different phases about too many people being insane or not enough people being insane. We got to do something about it. We got to do something about it and we got to think of the children. I'm also reminded of, and this is me quoting from memory something I read years ago. But I swear to God that there was a
Starting point is 00:03:02 political cartoon around the time of the Leopold and Loeb trial because there was, you know, it was a huge media trial. It was two rich teenagers who had, or close to teenagers who had apparently decided to commit the perfect murder for fun. Definitely made a big impression on Hitchcock. And they always, always fail at it. I feel like, they always always do. Coburger thing is the same. They're like, Like this time, I'm the smartest one. I'm going to get away with it. And time in Memorial, they all fail.
Starting point is 00:03:32 I guess, like, at the time the forensic psychiatrist was referred to as an alienist. Okay. Yeah. Right. And obviously, if you're, you have a robust defense, especially with Clarence Darrow involved, you're going to try and get a sympathetic alienist who says, well, I mean, I think they were trying to mount insanity as one of their defense tactics. And I think that there was a cartoon at the time that showed.
Starting point is 00:03:56 people reading about the trial or hearing about it and that the joke was truly something that moment when you realize everyone's insane. Oh, wow, that's great. I wonder, do you know what year that was? Tumblr is eternal. Yeah, seriously. This was in the 20s, like mid-20s, 24. It was like 27. It was a jazz age trial. Because that sets us up kind of nicely. Okay. We could start with the case that, like, illustrated this one version of the insanity defense, which is the McNaughton test. So they're, like, stricter and less strict definitions over time. And we can look at them as a spectrum. Well, let me start with, like, a bonehead question.
Starting point is 00:04:44 Go for it. Okay. So, like, today, right now, right, if you're, like, watching SVU with your grandma. Yeah. And they've got someone whose lawyer is using the insanity defense. what is the average like American TV viewers understanding of what that means? And is that approximately what the actual legal definition is? Oh boy. I feel like maybe you are better qualify. I don't know. You're pretty legally savvy. I feel like knowing the law messes you up
Starting point is 00:05:17 about what the average person thinks because it just rewires your brain in that way of thinking. Right. Okay. I think I have two levels of understanding. Okay. So I think, and I'm not confident that I'm right, but I think that the actual legal definition. Legally insane rather than medically, because of course, complicated. Yeah, legally insane. Right. As opposed to all the other possible definitions, is that you lack the capacity to tell the difference between right and wrong. But as I say that, I'm like, is that true? That might just be what they say on TV, like about how you. You have to wait 48 hours to report a missing person or whatever. Which like, don't go by those rules. If somebody goes missing, please try to report them because that is not every state. Yeah, there's our first PSA. Right.
Starting point is 00:06:05 And I think that like there's, you know, if you're like, if you watched even less law in order than I have, then you might just think that it's like some kind of boohoo, you know, sob story type defense where you're just like, I'm insane. And the judge is like, oh, poor baby. Or like, do you have a diagnosis? Or were you having a crazy, like, did people see you being insane? Yeah. But I know that also, like, across the board, there is this general American fear of someone getting off on a technicality. And I think that that is one of the ways that we see that as happening. And I'm very curious about what kind of a distance we must travel between the average SVU viewer and what appears to really be going on and also why it's going on. Yeah. So I think that you're absolutely right. And I know you've brought it up in different contexts on your show, but we're in this era where the like this specter of evil people getting off on technicalities is looming over all of us. And these people are beyond reform. And so this is a really terrible fear. And that world gets pretty far away from the whole founding principle of it's better that one or that a hundred guilty. the men go free than that one innocent be in prison like that those two conceptions are pretty far apart and yet i think we've landed in the oh my god somebody's going to be let off on a technicality
Starting point is 00:07:33 world right and in regards to the insanity defense i think your definition is i think you're right that that's what a lot of people think it is that's kind of what i was going to say too and it's pretty close to the truth the like lack of ability to determine the difference between yeah and that's a pretty strict interpretation, because if you think of it from really simple terms, anything that demonstrates trying to hide what you've done in theory could demonstrate that you understand at the very least that society sees this is wrong. Right. And also, like, as a question, because I have no idea what the answer is, but like, what if I'm like, okay, society recognizes that it will be wrong of me to assassinate this person. So I also understand based on my delusions that I must do it, that they
Starting point is 00:08:21 are controlling my brain, and so I have to, right? I mean, that's a difficult area. Yeah, and that's exactly what the problem, if you think it's a problem, is with this stricter definition. So I actually was going to use a case from when that was more the law of the land. Yeah. And so we started there, but applied it in a kind of loose way. Then we came to a much looser definition. Then, and this is where we'll spend most of our time. John Hinkley Jr. tried to kill President Reagan, got off on an insanity defense. To get Jody Foster's attention, you know, I mean. Which like, who among us has not tried to, yeah, exactly. But then everybody was very upset that he dared serve his sentence in a mental health facility, which he ended up serving 35 years at an inpatient facility. So it's not
Starting point is 00:09:18 like he was frolicing around. And now he posts his acoustic guitar songs on YouTube. Look, like, we'll talk more about him, but this is a guy he does paintings and has a rescue cat and writes his little acoustic songs. That is less harmful than many people that I've met. So. Right. And probably talked about in your line of work.
Starting point is 00:09:42 Yeah. Yeah. So we'll get to his case, though. Yeah. And of course, I'm always. interested in a case where someone is able to access extremely robust legal defense and then the public sees that happening and is like, oh my God, no, that's too much defense. We need to scale this back. Totally. It's another thing that we've talked about in other contexts that
Starting point is 00:10:06 oftentimes when somebody like has a successful defense. And I do think this can go too far. Like I just was covering the Diddy trial and he had like, too much defense. Too much defense. nobody nobody needs eight lawyers if they're one person you don't need more resources than the government like at that point it's really excessive but i mean hinkley was not a wealthy man um i think oh actually the first case that we're going to look at is an example of having a lot of legal resources because this gal had her legal fees paid for by william randolph hurst okay i want to hear about this one Yeah, right? He wanted exclusive rights to her story. So he, in exchange... Now, why don't we have more tabloid media offering to pay for people's legal defense? I'm sure it would be incredibly unethical, but still, but even so.
Starting point is 00:11:00 Exactly. Well, Hurst blazed a lot of super cool trails that made policymakers say, like, okay, now we have to put this law into place because the ethics of this are so fuked. See, honey, because of me, there's a warning. Exactly, like the sign put on the wall that makes you aware that someone has tried this before. So there are a lot of cases that are like good early insanity defense ones, but like this case, it's from Arizona like me and it has everything. It's got a hot 25-year-old woman with tuberculosis, lesbian affairs, and then a fugitive surrendering in a funeral home right before Halloween. Like this is a super fun case, except for the victim. And then Hearst. And then Hearst. Yeah. So this is Winnie Ruth Judd and in 1931. Wow. That is a name. I know, right? I want to hear her country single as well. I know. She could have had a rollicking career, but for the fact that she moved out to Arizona with her erstwhile husband, Dr. Judd, because she had tuberculosis and they thought that it would dry up her lungs. Yeah. You do what you can. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:15 So they move out there, but Dr. Judd is busy being addicted to morphine, so he's not really paying attention to his wife. As is the style at the time. Totally, I would have done the same, probably, if I had the access. But so she becomes friends with these two gals, and it's a little unclear who was sleeping with who? But there are gals. There's also another guy in the picture. She gets really mad one night, and long story short, the two gals end up dead. Winnie, don't do that.
Starting point is 00:12:45 Yeah, no, you shouldn't. I'm against that. She didn't know what to do, so she chopped them up and put them in her travel trunk and hat box. This is one of those ones where you're like, you might initially not know what to do, but then certainly, I kissed a handful of minutes into it, you'll be like, oh, this is a very long process of sawing up human bodies that I've embarked on. Maybe I shouldn't be doing this. You know, I thought the same thing as I was reading about this case because it almost, to me, is proof of insanity that she's like, oh, shoot, I shot people, you know what I should do, put their limbs in my hat box, and get on a train to Los Angeles, like cross state lines. It certainly isn't evidence of sanity, I would say. If anything, it's going to err on the not super stable side. It's just not practical. It's not because that's how she's caught. So she gets on the train and her trunk is leaking.
Starting point is 00:13:46 And they're like, it seems like you have a box full of dripping human body parts, ma'am. On our un-air-conditioned train because trains are not air-conditioned in that era. So she's got this putrid blood-leaking trunk. And the porter says, like, you got to do something about this. You can't bring your hunting spoils in the... cargo hold. They're like, listen, we're going to, we're going to continue to not notice for a while because you are a little lady. You are a cute little lady, so we'll give you some leeway. And she's like, oh, uh, I don't have the key. And then she just runs away. So she, she eventually gives
Starting point is 00:14:27 herself up. She's a smoothie. She's not well. Like, there's no read of this. This is, to be clear, like, I know that this is a sad story. It's, it's very sad. but also what an idiot. I love it. I feel like that's why she became somebody who, like, nobody in the state of Arizona wanted to see her executed. By the time that she was released, people had been begging for her release for years because, with respect, she's so dumb and frail.
Starting point is 00:14:55 Yeah. That nobody believes she did it herself. Like, there's no way. That she was able to do this murder herself? Yeah, and chop up the people. Like, she's a frail tubercular 25-year-old whose motive is kind of unclear. I like to believe that I am stronger than a young woman with tuberculosis in the 1920s,
Starting point is 00:15:16 but I think I would really struggle to chop up to human bodies. And then bring them to the train station. Yeah, that too. Yeah. Like, that's heavy. Yeah. I don't know if she had a buddy helping. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:15:28 But the bottom line is that like the reason why I thought this would be a good case is that public opinion by the time all of the evidence came out was so in her. favor. And yet she almost died. She almost was executed because there wasn't really a super clear insanity defense at trial option when she was put on trial. And there was so much, I mean, this is an evergreen issue, but like media attention and jury tampering and all that good stuff that comes with it. But she gets to trial because she surrenders in the funeral home and they bring her on back to Phoenix. Is this just a random funeral home that she runs into, or does she have some kind of connection here?
Starting point is 00:16:14 Great question. You would think there would be a connection. But no, I think she's just kind of wandering around. Yeah, you got to hide somewhere. There's another point in her journey where she's like hiding in a drain pipe and she writes a confession letter. Wow. One of many different variants of the confession letter. So like she's messy. People do not fugitive the way they used to anymore. Or she was just one of a kind. She was not great at stress. strategizing, but she was sure fun to watch. So it seems like she's kind of this madcap tabloid gal, you know, like the octo mom or something. And it's like, we tried to execute the octo mom. It's like, I think she's, I want to make fun of her choices. I don't want her to die. Right. That is a great parallel. Yeah, because I don't, I don't hate her. Well, I'm sure some people would like to execute the
Starting point is 00:17:02 octo mom, but I really don't want to. She's a slightly different kind of messy, but it's hard to time adjust. It's like inflation. It's like hard to do a direct parallel. Yeah. And that's a whole other topic is like true crime media of the 1920s and how all that works. Oh my God. Yeah. Please come back for that one. And speaking of Hearst, like I'm sure the yellow journalism mixed in did not help anything. Yeah. But there's so much more to this case that like if you're interested, just look this gal up because there's super fun stuff. I say glibly. But, um, So she gets convicted and sentenced to death, and I sent you, it's really ghoulish, there's an invite. No.
Starting point is 00:17:47 And I think I sent you the file. So this is how we celebrated the eve of Winnie Ruth Judd's execution. Okay, I have it. Oh, boy. Well, it looks like a wedding invitation. It's personally signed, yeah. Signed by the warden. So cute.
Starting point is 00:18:05 Addressed to a Mrs. and it says in kind of gothic font, you are respectfully invited to witness the execution of Winnie Ruth Judd at the Arizona State Prison at Florida. I mean, literally it's like the same Kearning as a wedding invitation. Yep, even like the way they do the hours. At Lawrence, between the hours of 12 and 5 a.m. Friday, April 21st, A.D. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:35 1933 I mean this by the warden though yeah come on man and he had to sign a stack of these so that it had a personal touch I guess like bananas god I mean this is the thing this is one of the things about the american legal system where we're like yes it is a very solemn and sacred duty to remove people who have forfeited the right to life from earth and it's like yeah but also you do things like nickname the electric chair old sparky oh my god invitation on at least one occasion. It's not good. And like somebody picked out the font to this because when you said like gothic font, it occurred to me like, yeah, somebody went and decided like, no, this is the appropriate calligraphy style that we want for our. They had, I don't know what the 1933 version of Kevin is. They had Woodrow do it. They sent Woodrow down to the stationers. To get like the block text. Yeah. So this is the 11th hour, obviously. This poor little gal is is freaking out. She's having fits of what will later be recognized as insanity. Recognize, I don't know. I mean, also, if you're, like, broadly speaking, if you're an American woman and
Starting point is 00:19:46 you're not insane in the 1920s and 30s, then, like, you're not aware of what's going on. I mean, yeah, think of her circumstance. Like, she's got an addict husband who's also a doctor. Who also might have chopped up her girlfriend's question mark? I think the prevailing opinion is that they all were fighting over a guy and there was maybe a self-defense element, but also maybe the guy was involved in killing the girls. Yeah. Which that I buy the most, I think, because he sounds like no good. Right. And there being some kind of love quadrangle happening. Yes, totally. So guess who intervenes at the 11th hour? William Randolph first? No, Eleanor Roosevelt. Of course. God bless. What did she do? So she writes in, I mean, I'm sure a lot of people
Starting point is 00:20:32 have issues. He's like, no one can execute you without your permission. So cute. Love the info. So she writes in to ask for clemency, but obviously, like, the gears are already turning with the legal defense and somebody decides that, like, there was a lot of mess going on at her first trial. There was a lot of jury misconduct. The reason that the four person says that they sentenced her to death was that they thought it would make her talk. So they really didn't want her to die they're like this is a strategy but that's not really a jury's job we use about the same tactic now or we would if we could i would say but we don't say it out loud if we do um because that's not what juries are for um strategizing to like get her to spill instead you like find out a juror
Starting point is 00:21:19 like posted something on their Facebook later on and you're like hey yeah this is the really dirty equivalent of that so like there's a lot of stuff conspiring to get this execution overturned, but what works is she's insane. So we're going to have another trial because at the time they didn't really have it so that you could assert it proactively, at least not in Arizona. Hmm. So does that mean that there's like not necessarily kind of procedural room for? Yeah, exactly. And I was like thumbing through the old statutes that they have online. And it's mentioned that nobody who's insane can be executed. but there's no provision of how to assert that.
Starting point is 00:22:03 Or of like how to like get like an expert witness to say it or it's just sort of like, yes, in theory it would work, but we won't tell you how or anything. Yeah, like we shouldn't do this, but there's no way to make sure that that doesn't happen in essence. Do you think that like in essence the spirit of American trial law can be summed up by the iconic meme. We're all trying to find the guy who did this. where it's like there's i feel like i run into in these stories from history a lot of this vibe of like oh man someone should write like a law or a stack shoot that addresses this issue a lot of buck passing yeah yeah and it's because like they're all afraid of doing it wrong but then nobody does it it's the same thing we talked about with enumerating stuff in the bill
Starting point is 00:22:52 of rights like running a leftist coffee shop never do it perfectly so why bother So why bother, truly, for many reasons? Because someone might yell at you one time. Couldn't survive that. Yeah, so I think you're right. But also, like, the people who make those mistakes are rarely there to answer for them. Right. Although this is a pretty big oversight, like writing a statutory code and saying, like, this should never happen, but not writing in the loophole.
Starting point is 00:23:19 Mm-hmm. That's a problem. Yeah. So they at least gave her the second trial all for the purpose of insanity. and this is under the McNaughton standard. And that is what we actually have returned to a stricter version of now post Hinkley. So we'll get to the modern iteration. But basically what this test is, is that somebody didn't have the mental capacity to understand their actions, like the nature of what they're doing,
Starting point is 00:23:48 or didn't have the capacity to understand that what they're doing is wrong to your definition before. or that it violates the rights of another. So that distilled is basically what you said. And how long have we had that around? At the time it was asserted in this case, it was less than 100 years old. It was this guy named Daniel McNaughton in the UK who I think like tried to kill a prime minister's secretary because he thought that they were conspiring against him. And it was a really similar situation that's like, oh, we shouldn't put somebody to death if they're fully crazy.
Starting point is 00:24:25 so let's devise this rule that now is named after the would-be. No, no, no. I think actually he succeeded at the assassination. McNaughton did. So that's the McNaughton rule. It's one of multiple approaches that can be used for the insanity defense. So there's another one that's like the other end of the spectrum, and this is called the Durham rule for anyone who's keeping a score.
Starting point is 00:24:50 But that allows you to be not guilty if whatever act, criminal act you did was the product of mental illness. So like that really covers anything. Right. That's super easy. Especially if you include narcissism, then we can get this whole administration off. Scott Free. That's another thing that I think the Winnie Ruth Judd case shows is like how divorced medical understanding is from what these legal definitions are and how they do sometimes butt heads, obviously back then because we're looking at it. And it seems like where the law intersects with medicine. Medicine generally travels farther faster because, you know, we are trying to stop science in this country, but it's harder. And like the goal of science is progress.
Starting point is 00:25:34 And then the law sort of like comes scurrying afterwards, or maybe sometimes following casually afterwards. It's almost like law wants to be set in stone. So it's kind of antithetical to the whole idea of science progress. Do you ever feel like the idea of the American legal system which was so appealing to me when I was younger and now I kind of like appreciate more for its messiness maybe but like just like being a young person watching law and order and being like wow isn't it amazing that like we found these eternal truths and now we're like running a system based off of them and it's like yeah that would be nice if it happened but it definitely didn't you just kind of like have generations of people doing their best but then some of them
Starting point is 00:26:22 refuse to let anyone revise what they said. It makes it kind of difficult and annoying. Yeah, like, I think the only way that it does work, when I just said what I said, which is that it's antithetical to the idea of progress, I was like, oh, God, that's, like, it's true, but what a terrible thing. That's not, so I feel like, yes, I agree with you, and it's a forever cycle of being like, oh, God damn it. And then hoping that things get better. Right. Or we can, you know, try and decriminalize progress a bit. Maybe. How about that? But it feels like it appeals to sort of that most perfectionistic impulse within people to be like,
Starting point is 00:27:03 we figured out how to handle things and we're not going to take any more comments at this time. Right. Well, and I guess like to play devil's advocate, there are two sides of this particular issue in the extreme because obviously look at what, for example, the current Supreme Court is doing with settled precedent. Like, you don't want somebody, or a legal system rather, that allows you to make changes willy-nilly with every changing administration. Yes, that's a very, very good point and a very timely point. It shouldn't be that easy that we can just change every X number of years.
Starting point is 00:27:45 years because some new interest comes in. So I think that's like the other side we have to avoid, but I don't know what the medium is. Well, it just, it all seems so easy when I'm just sitting on my couch complaining about it, you know. I think we could fix it if we did it. If we did it, we could really get this thing licked probably inside of a convention. At its best, I do feel like in legal history, you can see this balance or this sort of tightrope being walked between those needs that you're describing, the need to sort of like be overly reverent for the law that you're creating and the need to make it so flexible that anyone can come in
Starting point is 00:28:28 and structurally reorganize it. I don't know, that there is something fascinating and troubling and also in the best of times really profound and impressive about when it kind of works or when people are sincerely trying to create that balance between protecting people from their worst impulses and recognizing their sovereignty, you know? I would be happier if more of the stalwart folks or the regressive folks were actually reverent because I think part of the problem is that like they're not actually being true to print. Well, this gets into the last episode we did.
Starting point is 00:29:06 Yeah, I know. Like they're just making up their own new thing and calling it reverend. for the past. Yeah. Right. They're like, I love the Constitution so much that I am wiping my ass with it. Yeah. Okay. Interesting. That I rewrote it. And yeah, so there's a little philosophical diversion. Whatever. It's fine. So this is where we are in the 20s. We're in the jazz age. Yeah, so Winnie, Winnie is saved at the 11th hour by this insanity trial under the Magnotin standard. And the evidence that comes out, it's medical evidence in the early 30s, and it is very sexist. And it's a lot of doctors saying, like, look at how she twists her handkerchief there.
Starting point is 00:29:58 She won't stop twisting it. Like, she's obsessed with her handkerchief. She's like, Goldie Hawn, and death becomes her. free this woman. That's pretty cool. But like that truly was some evidence that they produced a trial was like we were watching her in the first trial and she just wouldn't stop twisting her handkerchief. And I'm thinking like, my God, by this definition, I would have been toast. Like, get this woman a fidget spinner. Exactly. It's also like certainly through the 70s and 80s and I would argue really like to this day, it's amazing how often sort of a lack of positive relationships with men as positioned as, you know, evidence that a woman is mentally unwell. And it's like, perhaps it's the men's fault. I don't know. Maybe, maybe it's some other factor. Maybe it's your morphine addicted husband who makes your life a living hell. Just possibly. And he, so he comes on the stand and he actually slaps her in the first trial because
Starting point is 00:30:57 she was crying so hard that he had to. Her husband? Yeah. So he, they clearly have a very nice relationship um yeah but he gives evidence of her insanity and he says that she really wanted a baby and kept talking like she was going to have a baby and again to me i'm like what else does a woman without a child do in the early 30s like she has no purpose she's living here because she's unwell her husband's crazy what are you supposed to do talk about having a baby like that i don't know so that's evidence i guess that she's unwell uh they also say sometimes she laughs out of nowhere nothing funny is happening and she just laughs out of nowhere i feel like when people in these again like in a hundred years ago and also today when people have to present evidence that a woman
Starting point is 00:31:52 is mentally ill they just kind of like present evidence that she's a woman and they're like well same thing really yeah yeah that she reacts to things sometimes that we can't see Right. Because certainly what has always struck me about kind of women's mental illness as described in the 60s and 70s. I'm like not just legally, but by clinicians at the time is that there's this idea of like, well, she's poorly adjusted. She's poorly adjusted to society. So she's mentally ill. Right. And it's like, well, how is she supposed to adjust to this? Yeah. So in this case, like her husband is clearly not a partner to her if he is both an addict. and working as a doctor. So, like, he's probably not there a whole lot. If she physically can't bear children because she's too frail, but that's kind of your prescribed purpose. That's going to take a toll on your psyche.
Starting point is 00:32:47 I don't know. It's a little bit funny to me to be characterizing it like this because I feel like chronic illness is such a modern term. Yeah. I mean, we had other terms. We could say wasting disease back in the day. But, like, I mean, I guess this is the direction we're going. in with like health care in this country but like imagine all the tubercular girlies on
Starting point is 00:33:09 Instagram talking about living with tuberculosis because they contracted it from drinking raw milk it's a little community at any time yeah but you know she has she has limited spoons she's got tuberculosis she does and especially like she's been living in this prison where she was going to be executed um that's a culture shock i'm sure for anyone it's been a tough time people are sending out cute invitations to her execution. And even her friends have vested interest, like, Hurst wanted his stories. So, like, it's a weird time to be Winnie. Yeah, Hurst is nobody's friend. No. Sadly. So she gets reclassified and put into a mental health facility, and I think she holds the record. I'm sure it's a great place to be. I know. But I think she holds the record of the most
Starting point is 00:34:00 escapes. Oh. She, yeah, she escaped like seven times in the 38 years she was there. I hope it was fun. Well, one time she went and went to San Francisco and became a nanny for a wealthy family for like a couple years under an assumed name. And then they finally caught up with her and they were like, all right, back in the pokey, Winnie. This is my, my fun connection is my aunt was the paralegal on her case when she was eventually released so oh my god yeah and apparently she was a very nice old lady and she just wanted to live her life and be left alone so yeah she died happily at like 93 and she was free so she outlived everybody yeah go winnie ruth judd um sorry to your victims also yeah or you know whatever happened whatever the hell happened yeah sorry to everybody except the warden so we thought that was a fun
Starting point is 00:35:00 of how little medicine is involved. Huh. Like, it's subjective. I'm sure it can be done very well. Right. But it's really about, like, what a jury can be convinced of and whether a jury or I guess a judge in some cases can be convinced that a defendant's behavior fits this criteria.
Starting point is 00:35:21 Is that about it? Yeah. And to your point, resources, too, because some of its money, some of it is just, like, legal acumen. in the Hinkley case, which we'll go to next, the prosecution, I think, only called two psychiatrists because they were like, well, this is a slam dunk. And then the defense called 27. Wow. That's too many psychiatrists, honestly. It's way too many. There's probably a joke set up somewhere in there, but like, obviously
Starting point is 00:35:50 there was an imbalance there. It's as many psychiatrists as Jim Morrison had years of being alive. It's not a joke exactly. It's more of a fact. It's just a fact. But yeah, I mean, it goes to show you that, like, never count your chickens, I guess. Right. Yeah. Yeah. They thought it was so obvious that he was guilty that he wouldn't get off and then...
Starting point is 00:36:14 And yet, whoops. Sometimes. Well, okay, can I tell you, like, my understanding of the story? Yes, please. Okay. Because I've read, you know, a bit about this. It's, like, part of my general Reagan research, because, of course, Reagan is, like, the palpatine behind where we are now.
Starting point is 00:36:30 thing, yeah. And somehow he is alive. That's going to happen our next election. Oh, God, damn. Somehow, Reagan is alive. And then he's going to run for president, I guess. Well, you know what? The last speech he gave right before Hinkley shot him, he ended the speech with and make America great again. So he is back in a sense. Okay. So I remember reading about how, I think this is to me like a really interesting thing about Hinkley is that he appears. to have been like just around and like not trying very hard to find an assassinate Reagan or like he was thinking about it but like he wasn't as far as I can remember like super dedicated. No. And then Reagan like happened to be the Washington Hilton to talk to like teamsters
Starting point is 00:37:18 or something. And Hinkley was like, oh, I'm right by the Washington Hilton. I'm just going to assassinate this guy. I mean, he was at like pretty close range. So it, you know, he clearly was a much worse shot than Oswald. He actually gave that as some evidence of his insanity was the fact that he didn't aim. That he wasn't very good at it. Well, he says that he didn't try. Huh. That he totally could have if he wanted to.
Starting point is 00:37:47 He was trying a lot harder than most people do to assassinate the president, to be fair. He was there with a gun, but. Right. And that he like, he kind of like winged Reagan, right? Or like a bullet, like, bounced off of part of the president. and like into Reagan's torso, something like that? Yeah, and other people were more grievously wounded. Right.
Starting point is 00:38:09 One of the victims did eventually die of complications related to the injuries. Right. Because there was a police officer who he shot. There were four people shot in total. Yeah. Yeah. Like a, yeah, a metro police officer. There was a Secret Service agent.
Starting point is 00:38:25 And then this is my soap box moment. James Brady was the. The White House press secretary, he was shot as well. And so I wanted to qualify everything that I say about Reagan with the fact that James Brady was the predecessor to Larry Speaks. Larry Speaks was the press secretary when the AIDS crisis started. Now, I had an uncle who died of AIDS in 1988, and his death almost certainly could have been prevented if Reagan just fucking listened. So, if I sound pointedly glib about an attempt on Reagan's life, it's because I am. And, like, this is directly correlated to the appointment of Larry Speaks, and obviously, Larry Speaks was just a mouthpiece for the man himself.
Starting point is 00:39:16 I sent you a little clip of Larry Speaks talking about AIDS on behalf of Reagan, which we do not have to include, but I just thought it was vile and worth sharing. Yeah. Yes, just like listen to him. Let me, I'm going to play this. Okay. Corollary. Okay. We love a corollary here.
Starting point is 00:39:33 The show could be called. Perfect. Corollary the musical. Okay, I'm playing it. Oh, boy. I think this is weaponized, good old boy. Right. The amount of giggling in the background is astounding.
Starting point is 00:40:42 Is astounding. And just like the making yucks about, it's not only jocks, ha-ha. Oh, my God. Yeah. It's also, it's fascinating, too, that he's being asked about it in the capacity of are the armed forces afraid of AIDS patients trying to transmit AIDS to them, which is surely the most pressing concern. Bio weapon.
Starting point is 00:41:18 Although, for Reagan, it was probably the most strategic framing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, and even then. So that was the person who replaced James Brady after this shooting. Yeah. So good job, Hinkley. One step forward and two steps back.
Starting point is 00:41:36 Exactly. I'm going to sound a little careless about this. So should we talk about Hinkley? Yeah. Oh, my God. Let's please talk about Hinkley. Because who is this guy who happens to be in the neighborhood and tries to pull off an assassination? And boy, does he not manage it?
Starting point is 00:41:54 He is a lonely straight white guy in his 20s, which is really bizarre. And he's obsessed with a girl. And so he watched a taxi driver in his, I don't want to say formative years. He tried to be a musician for like, he literally went to New York, couldn't find a hotel room that he could afford. The traffic was too much. So he's like, I give up on my dream of being a musician one day. Like, he could have used some good parenting at that point. And he's like, what, like 20 at this?
Starting point is 00:42:30 Yeah, he's, yeah. Around his assassination attempt. But so he is kind of drifting around, watch his taxi driver, and sees it like 16 times or something in the theater, and just gets hyper fixated on Jody Foster, who at the time was a minor. Which is also so weird, because it's a movie about a creepy. scary man and like at any point it's about it and also it's a movie about a creepy scary man who is himself fixated on jody foster and you would just kind of think that at a certain point you'd be like maybe i don't actually want to follow the exact same path as this guy it's like the american psycho thing it's like half of the audience is going to miss that this is like
Starting point is 00:43:20 god you're right because men love taxi driver and they love you know where you're like, wait, but do you know, this is about a man, like, completely decompensating and how it's, like, bad, that's the thing about films, you know? It's, they can say, they can communicate all kinds of things, but that doesn't mean people have to understand them. Well, you'd have to be so ham-fisted to just, like, give on a silver platter that we don't want to be Travis Bickle, like, that's not aspirational, my guy. Right.
Starting point is 00:43:49 Well, you would have to have Scorsese come out at the end be like, all right, I'm already Scorsese. Remember me? I was the guy in the taxi at the beginning. I was talking to the taxi driver. Anyway, don't do this. Like a John Hughes moment. So by the time he gets obsessed with her, she is just starting at Yale. He went out to L.A. for a while and was doing his, you know, dirty L.A. street kid thing as he gets obsessed with her. Then he decides, like, I got to go back and be closer to her in New Haven. so he moves back to the northeast and starts like calling her and so there are some recordings of those phone calls and she's very oh my god this is why i thought of this part now like she's so firm but composed she's like man is it you again like you understand i can't talk to you because i don't know you right like she's nice but she's rational i think if i were a famous person in
Starting point is 00:44:51 college at that time I'd be like fuck off bro like leave me alone but she's very measured um and I guess she has a lot of practice because she's been famous like since she was at least you know I mean she was she was in movies as a small child so she's just like I want to say like nine-ish yeah she was well and I think she she did like I mean not that you would be known for this exactly but I think she did a copper tone campaign when she was like two you know she's been working since she was a baby basically. But, you know, that doesn't give you the, I don't know, the psychological strength to not unleash your rage at somebody. Right. Yeah. You feel like she's getting her like Clarice Starling practice that she's going to use in the silence of the lambs in years and years.
Starting point is 00:45:38 Like pretty formative. But also like a little, a hair of discomfort that is grounding in her humanity, you know? Right. You can tell that she's not in. enjoying this or she's not like, you know, grandstanding or anything, but also that she's not going to back down. Like she appreciates the gravity of the situation. And I feel like with somebody who was as unstable as Hinkley was at the time, obviously he was ready and willing to take a life and he was living in delusion land. Yeah. It's really good that she didn't get too aggressive because I could see rejection having turned really ugly with a case like this. Or, you know, him deciding to show up at Yale instead.
Starting point is 00:46:19 That's what I mean, yeah. Okay, so he fits a type that we recognize. Yeah, it is certainly a type. And I would say when I was reading about it, it was funny how much the word parasycial kept coming to mind, except that that was a weirder phenomenon back then. Like to think that you know somebody and you have a relationship with somebody and a loyalty to them just like totally unilaterally becomes really common down the road. But back then, it was almost like that in and of itself was proof of insanity. And I think we slowly have gotten to a place where it's more common. I don't know what to do with that information.
Starting point is 00:47:00 It just came to mind. You're right. And that it's become like a whole sort of form of like job creation and economics. Yeah. And I feel like there's sort of there's a degree of like illusion that you expect people to understand the partaking in that some number of people won't understand. and we'll take literally. And that's always going to, that's always going to be dangerous. Exactly. And obviously, when I say parasycial relationships are more common now, people aren't taking it to this level. That's not what I mean. He obviously went to the nth degree, but like,
Starting point is 00:47:37 it was really funny to read all this symptomology that came out at trial. And I don't know that we would all recognize that as being so common nowadays, but how about that? And they talked about like he had no close friendships and thus nobody to ground him in reality. And I'm like, well, that also sounds really familiar. Yeah. Well, and we also now have like, you know, whether or not you believe in the concept of the male loneliness epidemic, there's certainly a lot of incentives to sell them propaganda about how they'll never be loved until they buy all these, you know, protein supplements and take all these courses and learn how to, you know, buy a course where you learn how to become a magnate from someone who shouldn't have to sell all these courses on being a
Starting point is 00:48:19 magnate if they're really a magnate. If they are a magnate, a life coach without any certification, but like they're going to help you. Um, Alpha male podcasters, exactly. I hate to bring podcasts into this, but, yeah. The, I mean, the podcast don't kill people. It's the pariscial relationships. Joe Rogan kills people. That's punchier. Yes. Okay. So like, Yeah, he develops this fixation. Weirdly enough, he was really upset about John Lennon getting assassinated. Like that, he lists that as a turning point. John, listen to yourself.
Starting point is 00:48:57 Like, come on. You're so upset about that assassination. You have to attempt America's next big assassination, the assassination of the summer, if you will. Yeah, like he bought Catcher in the Rye. He went to a vigil outside the Dakota. Wow. After. And then he said three months later.
Starting point is 00:49:15 later, he did his. So I didn't realize how proximate in time they were, but it really was a catalyst. Which also, if you're an American, you have to have, you know, a certain number of people had to have been like, oh my God, are we doing this again? Is it 1968? Are we going to have so many assassinations now? Yes. I thought the same, I mean, and like the phase of hijacking, because he also thought, he's like, maybe I'll try that. And he actually went to the airport in Tennessee with a handgun. See, this is what I love. I love a criminal who came. get it off the ground. He's just like, maybe, no, no, no parking in New York. Never mind. Never giving it. Never mind about the music career. And just like desperately influenced by trends.
Starting point is 00:49:57 He's like, oh, hijacking. Shit, maybe I'll do that. Yeah. Which, like, for people who don't know, in the 70s for a while, like, people were hijacking planes like all over the place. You don't hear about it anymore now because, you know, now the last one we remember, they flew it into the world trade center and it was a tragedy that changed the world forever. But in the 70s, probably your dad could just like hijack a plane for a little while and like, you know, jump out of it with a bunch of money he stole or something like that. That's the best case scenario. Very few get hurt on that one. But, like, yeah, like, he just traipsed into the airport in Tennessee. And I think there was some fluky thing that ended up getting him caught.
Starting point is 00:50:44 Like, it wasn't a routine screening. And then they just fined him $50 because he said it was for target practice. They're like, no guns in the airport. Go back to Swarthmore, young man. Yeah, right. Sorry to Swarthmore. I don't know that there's any connection. I just, you know, it's where I imagine some guy who can't get it together would go.
Starting point is 00:51:04 So, yeah. And then ironically, I did note that Reagan's reaction to the Lenin shooting was saying, like, handgun control is not the answer. So there is another little bit of irony. Exactly. Yeah. No, this is not a classy show. Of course, now I have a mental image of Reagan being reached for comment in the hospital going handgun control is still not the answer. You know what?
Starting point is 00:51:30 I bet you're not far off, truly. So, yeah, Deyev, he walks by this place, and he just, it's pretty close quarters with everybody leaving this AFL-CIO teamster talk. Or he was like, hello, teamsters, I'm going to ruin your life. Have fun with that. Excuse me, yeah. And he gets, he shoots four people, all of whom are associated with the president. So, yeah, you got. And does he just kind of open fire kind of on the group as, as, as, Reagan is being ushered into his car, essentially. Yeah. And it sounds like, because he specifically said he did not aim and that that was evidence of
Starting point is 00:52:14 his lack of clarity of mind. Do you believe that? Because I do, I do believe that, that he just kind of is like, oh, what do I do now? I guess I'll shoot this gun now or something. I do believe it. And I think that like the lack of coherence to the whole plan, the lack of coherence to this piece makes sense. Yeah. And then he's just kind of going around looking for something big to do, but it doesn't really matter what the thing is and that he hasn't thought through. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:41 Because Travis Bickle had a mission. And then I guess we get into the question of what is the difference between insanity and poor planning. Well, kind of and stupidity. Like, yeah, that one. Because that's what I thought with Winnie Ruth Judd. Like, don't put limbs in a hat box, but also maybe you're just dumb. Sorry. Right. Like, is this a bad choice or is this a choice of someone, like disconnected from reality and that's very hard to determine with some people honestly and what should affect culpability because if you get down to it like obviously anybody who does a crime of a certain caliber is by definition not mentally healthy yeah that's what I think and I and you know this gets complicated but I don't think that like yeah I think premeditated murder is like
Starting point is 00:53:28 by definition, you know, if you're not motivated by like a huge amount of money or something like that. Or like principles that are really clearly, like, I'm thinking of like Franz Ferdinand was not necessarily, they at least knew what they were doing and it was a plan. But yeah, that if, but murder as the sort of, as the crime and the motive. Right. And then we get into this difficult thing where like there's this sort of core belief, I think, in American history and American masculinity that violence is a sane thing to do. Right, right. There's times when violence is acceptable,
Starting point is 00:54:03 but there's a sort of core tenet of American masculinity that violence is just like a nice hobby, and I don't think that that's a sane belief system, but if you ask a lot of people, they'll say that it is. Yeah, like it lives on that spectrum of the biggest con that men committed is convincing women that anger isn't an emotion sort of thing. like that violence is about the most emotional thing you can do and I feel like that kind of connects to our point but like it's a very mentally unhealthy thing to let violence control your action yeah and yet and yet we don't say every person is legally mentally ill right for the purposes of the defense nor should we I mean that would be a crazy way to let people we would all be dead in a manner of speaking right and then yeah with any with all of this it kind of comes down to a lot of individual choices, kind of at, in a trial capacity, it seems like.
Starting point is 00:55:02 Yeah. But so, okay, so he's arrested, like, immediately. He doesn't get shot because everybody is... Because he's just standing around, I presume, because he didn't think ahead. Well, it's so close quarters. He thought he would get shot. He was like, I was prepared to just, like, die. That probably would have been convenient for his mental state. Like, he didn't have a plan in life. He was just kind of... go out in a blaze of glory. So really, it's, it seems like a sort of, that there's just like a lot going on in his head and he's fashioned it all to this one thing he's going to do. Yeah. And I think like a vacuum of other purposes and influences that then his mental illness filled with Jody Foster. But also like if it wasn't her, it would have been
Starting point is 00:55:50 Christy McNichael. It's at a certain point of just a woman who existed and some guy came along and here we are. And got obsessed with you. So they actually played taxi driver at the trial. Oh my God. How? Like, from my understanding, they played the entirety of the movie for the jury. That's incredible. Like, imagine you're just like trying. I mean, I guess it would be like useful information, but like that is a long and intense movie. Yeah. Man. And apparently like a big part of it was the defense using this as evidence, like, watch him, watch the movie. Wow. And he was just fixated.
Starting point is 00:56:32 Yeah. I mean, it is a good movie, to be fair. It's not like it's boring or something. Right, right. I mean. Also, like, what a weird week to be like Sybil Shepard or something. You know, you're like, yeah, I don't know. Apparently the jury is watching that movie I did a few years ago to determine if this presidential
Starting point is 00:56:49 would be assassin is insane or not. Anyway. All in a day's work, right? Yeah. You can't buy publicity like that. No. And poor Judy Foster, she did not have to appear in person, but she gave a deposition that was taped. And that also went a ways in proving his insanity because she said in the deposition that they did not have a relationship and she did not know him. And he had a little bit of an outburst at that. And had to be removed from the courtroom.
Starting point is 00:57:21 Yeah. But so the test that they used at that time in the D.C. Circuit and the federal courts, which is where he was tried, was this kind of middle ground test, which is the model penal code test, again, if you're note-taking, the standard there is that at the time of the act, you're suffering from mental illness and because of that lacked capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of your conduct or lacked the capacity to conform your conduct to the law's requirement. So it's that last piece that's a little more permissive. Okay. That it's like you basically can't control yourself and you can't fit yourself into law-abiding society's norms. Which is interesting because if you want to assassinate the president in order to impress Chodey Foster,
Starting point is 00:58:09 you understand that you want her to be impressed by the level of your wrongdoing. Yeah, that's a great point. But the desire to do it also arguably shows that you don't understand the wrong, like, I don't know, like the true reality of the wrongness of it, only that it would be impressive. I do find it really interesting, yeah. I think if they had had just the McNaughton test, which is what they ended up going back to and making a little stricter after, then it just would have been the right or wrong element and there wouldn't have been this, like, or you're so mentally ill that you can't conform your conduct to legal norms. Right. Which in that case is like,
Starting point is 00:58:51 maybe you understand all kinds of things, but you can't... You just can't control yourself. That knowledge, yeah. Which I think is more useful. Yeah, it could get a little permissive if we do think about it. Like, imagine a world of Hinkley-esque men who are just like, I can't stop. I don't have to imagine it. It's on Reddit.
Starting point is 00:59:11 I know. Imagine if you can. I know it sounds over the top. You have to, I guess, draw a line. somewhere and then the question of where the somewhere is ends up being a little subjective because I do truly believe right if you look at our president 45 slash 47 like I don't think Trump actually is capable of making better choices than he is right now right at this point certainly not yeah well that too yeah and like I know that he knows he's doing horrible things and
Starting point is 00:59:43 is doing them on purpose and that the cruelty is the point but also like has he ever had the capacity to be less of a horrible narcissist? I don't think so, but that doesn't mean he's not criminally liable, you know? Right. And I think that brings us to a great point, which is kind of like the philosophical underpinning of the whole thing, which is like, what is the goal of punishment? Yeah, which is why bother having a legal system when there's such a pain? Yeah. And also like, what is the goal of incarceration? Because if you are found not guilty, which people will disagree on it seems. Yeah, boy, yeah. But it's, it's not like he was walking around because of the not guilty verdict. Like, he was incarcerated. Right. But it was in a mental health facility. And so it's
Starting point is 01:00:30 like, if that's what we're talking about the distinction for, maybe I don't mind the more permissive definition as much, because does that just mean that we put the Trump-esque thinkers in a treatment facility? Yeah. And now they all have to play tennis with each other until they die. Yeah. Like, that's not release them back on the streets to do this again. Yeah. God, imagine all of them just like in a secure facility forced to play risk with each other. I mean, I don't want to work there, but it would be nice in ways. But we could pay the people who do work there really well. Lots of money. Tell me about this verdict, because were people kind of thinking as this was going on, like, oh, it'll be fine. He'll definitely be convicted.
Starting point is 01:01:16 he did try to kill the president after all, or was there a sense of like, I don't know, he does seem to have an awful lot of lawyers. He didn't have that many lawyers. Oh, he didn't. Okay. No, they just called a ton of psychiatrists. Oh, right. They just had 27 women who came to make up for it.
Starting point is 01:01:33 Yeah. Like the witness balance there shows that everybody assumed, yeah, this guy tried to kill the president in broad daylight. On camera, like there's footage of it. You can watch it right now if you wanted to. Yeah. And, like, not that a good motive would have made a difference, but, like, for why? Like, because Jody Foster.
Starting point is 01:01:54 Right. Like, what if he was like, well, I'm very upset about the trade deficit or something. Right. Or, like, maybe if I had done it because of AIDS. Yeah. There's at least cause and effect. Yeah. And that's kind of the inevitable Luigi Mangione parallel of it all, right?
Starting point is 01:02:11 Where, like, oh, great point. Yeah. Right? To me, it's like, it makes complete. sense that like at this point in time we had and I know that there's like plenty of people plenty of conservatives who are like it's terrible it's terrible to be glamorizing an assassin blah blah blah blah blah but just how like everyone I know and everyone who I sort of see online and like in the sort of world that I'm in was immediately just like protect our boy
Starting point is 01:02:38 and I mean like where is that indignation when people die every day for no reason because of these companies. So, like, that's, yeah, imbalanced. Republicans were super upset, obviously. The end of this shock people? Was this, like, kind of like an OJ moment? Or, like, did people see it coming? I don't know that I would put it to that level. Yeah, I mean, I didn't have it live on Oprah. Nothing's at that level, but. Yeah. And the tricky thing here is, like, he definitely is not, or at least at that point, he was not well. He certainly was whatever you would. would consider to be quote unquote insane to use the term of art. In that sense, it's different than OJ because it's not that anybody was saying he didn't do it. Right. Right. And that it's not,
Starting point is 01:03:29 you know, based on do you believe that he did it or not? And that cultural divide. Like, everyone agrees on what happened in this case. Okay. Yeah, it's an affirmative defense. It's like, yes, I did this, but I can't be carclerly responsible for my actions. Like the punishment is a different form. And I realized that this also more or less coincides with the the Willowbrook expose. And I think that that's not an accident. So what is that? So Geraldo Rivera. Oh boy. Yep. Heraldo. Welcome. Sit down. Still there. Yeah. Still hanging out. Some hot pictures of him online in his 70s, if anyone's looking for them. But so he did this expose. in the 70s about a mental health facility, an asylum, because it really was, this marked
Starting point is 01:04:23 the end of the era of asylums. And it was called Willowbrook. And it really exposed the inhumane treatment. Because interestingly, Reagan also, like the Reagan administration created policy that also deinstitutionalized a lot of people, right? Ironically. Yeah. So I think this doesn't necessarily affect, you know, Hinkley specifically, but I'm just thinking about like the shift in this country from mental health institutions to incredibly expensive places. Yeah, like that they don't really exist, but the people still exist who are potentially dangerous to themselves and others, so they can't be free to deal with their mental health until or unless they're better but now we don't have places dedicated to that like the fix was fixing the institutions but like
Starting point is 01:05:15 you don't want to go back to the past where you have people being forcibly institutionalized and ending up in abusive places that they can't leave but now we just put them in prison right but now it's like there is no place to go if you're a threat to yourself or your family if you can't afford it so we don't even call them mentally ill so i feel like that yeah that coincided with the reformed forms after Hinkley, which basically got rid of a lot of the options of pleading some version of insanity. So now you either can't assert it and or there's no other facility that you can go alternatively. And I think that those kind of dovetailed and worked together to create prisons as the mental health facility. Yeah. Yeah. And what that also means is that like if
Starting point is 01:06:07 you're someone who has someone who is a danger to you in your life or who poses a threat or who, you know, is stalking you or behaving threateningly toward you, it's very difficult to know how to handle that for many reasons, but partly because if you have any, if you care about that person at all, which frequently is the case, then like you don't want them to go to prison as their only option or for something completely terrible. to happen to them. Or even a loved one, like, who's having a mental health crisis that gets to a point that you can't physically or emotionally handle it. Yeah. Where you are not able to take care of them, but you want someone to, as opposed to, you know, the only care that exists being
Starting point is 01:06:55 some form of punishment. It's a... Yeah. Yeah. It's not good. It's not great. So, like, long story short on post Hinkley reforms, there was a congressional act that made the standard higher and also got rid of some of the expert witness options. And some states went even further. So if you're familiar with Eileen Warnos, the gal who Monster was based on, I sure did watch cable TV growing up. Yeah. Heck yeah, me too. Eileen Ornos is fascinating for many reasons, but one is because when she was, you know, big in the news in the 90s, everyone was like, she's the first female serial killer. And it's like she's actually one of the first female serial killers to, you know, become a household name because she killed men outside the home. But women have been quietly being serial killers, often killing, you know, children or their patients or the elderly or just people in their care for such a long time.
Starting point is 01:07:58 and so many of them don't get caught. So, you know, that's all. Hers was arguably like a lot of them were self-defense adjacent. And the point of connecting it to this, she did not plead insanity, but all these strictures that states put in place after Hinkley, and whether they're directly related or not, it's been a couple decades now.
Starting point is 01:08:25 But in Florida, where she was tried, if you don't plead it, insanity you can't introduce any mental health evidence so it becomes this like damned if you do damned if you don't so it's like if you don't throw yourself into this trap that really would control your legal strategy and any testimony that you would give then you can't add any evidence of what your state of mind was or what you might have been suffering and in her case that was really key. Right. Because like the story basically is that she was a survivor of a lot of sexual abuse and then was working as a sex worker and killed, you know, some number of men. And to me, one of the interesting
Starting point is 01:09:08 questions has always been like, how many of them just actually did have it coming? Because like, I can see a scenario where all of them did, honestly. If you look at it from a sort of battered woman syndrome adjacent defense. Yeah. That like her nervous system was super heightened when it came to male sexual partners doing XYZ. And here's mental health evidence of why. Like you couldn't do that in Florida at the time. So yeah. And that's at least an interesting potential line of defense and to not have that available to you also seems. Bummer. I hate to use it, the word, but problematic. Yeah. Yeah. Better than my word. I like them both. Yeah. But it's this interesting thing of like you lose the ability to express the reality of the client's mental situation if you have that kind of restriction.
Starting point is 01:10:02 Right. It's really bizarre. And I know you have talked about like junk science evidence and some of the traps adjacent to that. And I feel like this fits into that whole constellation of what you can say, what you can't say, the lack of uniformity of what rules were working. with at any place in time is really tricky. And then so a lot of states now have actually gotten rid of, not a lot of states, some states have gotten rid of the insanity defense altogether. There's also like an advent of this new thing that's guilty but mentally ill, which then you still go to prison. That's just like when someone's like, how are you doing? You're like, well, I feel guilty, but also mentally ill. So that asterisk. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know. So basically like if you get that in your verdict. You go to prison, but then you get to see somebody for a screening to see if you need inpatient care, which I don't know at that point, maybe it's 6.1. Right. And then like
Starting point is 01:11:03 what kind of inpatient care are you going to get within the prison system? Seems like the option that you're left with. It's also, I mean, this makes me think of this, you know, the 1970s death penalty moratorium. And my understanding is that a big part of the rationale for that was at like Furman v. Georgia or something like that or the stated rationale was that we have to like if we have the death penalty being implemented like differently for different reasons across different states and for different defendants than like how can we swear to the constitutionality of something that's being applied in such a kind of random and arbitrary manner and it feels like you're kind of saying the same thing. Boy, you just pulled a thread on the whole system. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:11:50 Yeah. And obviously, if you take it a little bigger, there's the whole state's rights thing, which drives me nuts. And it is the rallying cry of like every unjust cause ever. Right. And state's rights historically is like code for the state's rights to be racist. To do what? Yeah. Finish the sentence. Yeah. For better or worse on the insanity defense, we had both federal and state responses. So like everybody was really whipped up. up into the same frenzy at the state and federal level. And I know you and I have talked about like how infrequently those knee-jerk legislative responses tend to address the problem that they're knee-jerking to. And I think this is a good example. I do understand how it would be shocking. Like I imagine like a random citizen, there's been this trial of this guy who
Starting point is 01:12:44 attempted on purpose to assassinate the president. And now you're hearing that he's not going to prison and also I'm sure are being told implicitly and also out loud by you know all the news sources for whom this is like a huge bombshell that like maybe he'll be released at any time we don't know he's not going to prison we don't have a sentencing guideline I'm sure if anybody wanted to rile up their voter base that that would be the thing to say and so I'm sure many did say it that like do you want to live in this country like I have like Pentecostal preacher cadence in the back of my head, you know, like, and I, just the other day, I read news of a man who tried to shoot our president, and he may be out of the slimmer in six weeks.
Starting point is 01:13:30 Absolutely. And we know those guys loved Reagan. So, like, of course, that was the word on the street. And then, like, for the record, Hinkley was, in essence, incarcerated. Like, he was not free to leave the facility. And every, like, bit of freedom that he got back, was a court hearing. So it's like if he wanted to be allowed to go to an art therapy thing once a month, it was a whole hearing and everybody came out of the woodwork and we're like, this guy tried to kill Reagan. Well, and also, from what I remember, because this has, you know, been such a long story, but that like sometime in the past 10 years, he was, whatever the equivalent of parole is. And of course, that was a huge story. And that the terms of his release meant
Starting point is 01:14:16 that he, like, had to stay a certain distance away from, like, any ex-presidents, which is funny, but then you think about the fact that he was, I think, in the custody of his mother who lived in Virginia. And you're like, well, there have to be kind of a lot of presidents around, actually. You're absolutely right. And it actually was an issue because his mom was in, like, a pseudo-retirement community if memory serves. And it abutted with, like, a golf course and who loves to golf. Former presidents love to golf. Yes. So, There actually was a question of like, oh, God damn it. How do we make this work?
Starting point is 01:14:52 But he was released like 2022, I want to say, and a lot of people pitched a fit about it. But he was in inpatient, essentially incarcerated for 35 years. And he really, like, the fact that he now has comments turned off on his YouTube channel, but he didn't for a long while. and the fact that he fielded what I'm sure he got in the comment section and didn't lose his mind to me is pretty good evidence that he is stabilized. Yeah, well, and also it's like, and this gets into the question of, as you were saying, what is the purpose of incarceration? What is the purpose of institutionalization in this case? And I think that if we're going to pretend to be the country that we like pretending to be and to have the values that we like to pretend to have, we have to at least.
Starting point is 01:15:43 go along with the claim that we do want people to heal if they possibly can. Do we want someone to be able to live a nice life when they are no longer a threat or cannot only happen when they have repaid their debt to society? And if so, how do they do it? And who is society? And is it only repaid when every single person thinks that they've suffered enough? Because it can't be that because there's always going to be someone somewhere who thinks it's not enough. And those people are motivated by, I would say, non-utilitarian motives and things that we wouldn't want ruling our sentencing. Yeah. This all comes down to sort of what we imagine government to be for, which I realize there's a lot of difference of opinion on that. But I feel like to me, this gets into the area of
Starting point is 01:16:32 like, as cynical as I believe myself to have become, I'm really not. I'm really just a cock-eyed optimist underneath. And I truly... Me too. Right. And like, And that's a great thing to be. And I do believe that like, just because we, you know, we know partly from being students of history that there are times when this can happen and has happened that the law can, you know, not just try and prevent things from happening or trying, you know, contain people who pose a threat to themselves or others or to sort of, you know, the law is not just an instrument of control, but can also, we can use it to try and conceptualize. better things. Yeah, and how to how to facilitate people potentially becoming who they can be rather than who they've been forced to become and that it's, you know, you can't expect it to work all the time or even a lot of the time, but that the potential to bring out what people are capable of in the best way is also worth trying to to enshrine, I think. Those are beautiful
Starting point is 01:17:40 points and I really think it's the only way to be if we want to move forward at all because fear just rots your brain. Yeah. Literally. I could do this all day and someday soon we will. Where can people enjoy some of your work? And also, since we're putting this out in August, what's a flavor of August that you recommend? Find me, I'm at MKZ Joy Brennan on most of the social media. I'm mostly on Instagram, and I also have a website that's mKZjoybrennan.com. And a flavor of August, see, you're asking somebody with like, I'm autism spectrum and I I'm one who, like, I eat about three things. So. Nice. What are your three things if you, if you want to?
Starting point is 01:18:31 I just found these, like, great frozen yogurt, mint chocolate chip ice cream pop things. Nice. And I ate like three of them yesterday. So I'm sure that I'll keep up until August because I'm a creature of habit. But yeah. Yeah. Some people need to be reminded of ice cream. Does that answer the question or did you mean it in a fun, esoteric way?
Starting point is 01:18:53 And I went for ice cream. No, I mean it however you want. I mean, I've been talking up sweet corn. I think sweet corn is like, corn is so present that it's easy to forget that like you can just like add a little corn. Add a little corn to your life. Add a little corn to your life. I made ramen today and I threw in a bunch of sweet corn and like...
Starting point is 01:19:13 You're crazy. My God, is that good. I am crazy. Summer girls. I'll go to a movie on a weekday. I'm crazy. Oh, man. Got to get out of here.
Starting point is 01:19:26 Execution. That was beautiful. Thank you so much. This is great. I'll see you for a bonus shortly and I can't wait. Oh, heck yeah. And that is our episode. Thank you so much for listening.
Starting point is 01:19:46 And thank you, of course, to our guest, McKenzie Joy Brennan. You can find her at MKZ Joy Brennan on the social media network of your choice. And her website is mKZjoybrennan.com. Thank you to Miranda Zickler for editing and producing. Thank you to Carolyn Kendrick for editing. and producing. We'll see you next time. Thank you.

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