Why Neuroscience is Coming to Courtrooms

By Eryn Brown, Knowable Magazine
Sep 5, 2019 12:00 AMNov 11, 2019 8:04 PM
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(Credit: Knowable Magazine)

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On March 30, 1981, 25-year-old John W. Hinckley Jr. shot President Ronald Reagan and three other people. The following year, he went on trial for his crimes.

Defense attorneys argued that Hinckley was insane, and they pointed to a trove of evidence to back their claim. Their client had a history of behavioral problems. He was obsessed with the actress Jodie Foster, and devised a plan to assassinate a president to impress her. He hounded Jimmy Carter. Then he targeted Reagan.

In a controversial courtroom twist, Hinckley’s defense team also introduced scientific evidence: a computerized axial tomography (CAT) scan that suggested their client had a “shrunken,” or atrophied, brain. Initially, the judge didn’t want to allow it. The scan didn’t prove that Hinckley had schizophrenia, experts said — but this sort of brain atrophy was more common among schizophrenics than among the general population.

It helped convince the jury to find Hinckley not responsible by reason of insanity.

A mugshot taken by the FBI of Hinckley shortly after he attempted to assassinate President Reagan(Credit: United States Federal Bureau of Investigation/Wikimedia Commons)
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