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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Passionate indictment of court treatment of insanity issues
In this timely, interesting book, psychologist Barbara R. Kirwin writes of her experience as a forensic psychologist in the New York City area. Kirwin did most of her evaluations and testimony on behalf of the prosecution, but her writing does not suffer from a prosecutorial bias. Rather, Kirwin attacks the treatment of insanity issues in the courts from a perspective...
Published on April 5, 2002 by H. F. Gibbard

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16 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Should be called "Why I think the legal system is Wrong"
I picked this book up hoping it would be about the criminal mind, as the title suggests. Instead it is mostly Dr. Kirwin's thoughts about how the legal system treats mentally ill patients unfairly. This is all prpbably true, but it is NOT what the title implies. She just goes on and on about lack of funding and peoples reaction to a not guilty by insanity plea. She...
Published on February 5, 1999 by vanderwilt@earthlink.net


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Passionate indictment of court treatment of insanity issues, April 5, 2002
In this timely, interesting book, psychologist Barbara R. Kirwin writes of her experience as a forensic psychologist in the New York City area. Kirwin did most of her evaluations and testimony on behalf of the prosecution, but her writing does not suffer from a prosecutorial bias. Rather, Kirwin attacks the treatment of insanity issues in the courts from a perspective outside traditional categories.

While Kirwin deplores the use of "designer defenses" by high-paid counsel attempting to secure acquittals for psychopathic clients, she also is dismayed by juries' willingness to convict persons who are obviously mentally ill and in need of treatment, simply because the defendant "did the crime." Her lack of faith in jurors' ability to understand and apply the various insanity tests leads her at one point to suggest that insanity issues be removed from the jury's consideration altogether. She does not discuss the issues this might raise under the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution, which guarantees a defendant the right to jury trial. This is a very thorny issue and deserves further study. Overall, Kirwin is better at identifying the problems with such relics as the M'Naughten insanity test than she is at proposing workable solutions.

The book would have benefitted from a broader discussion of the issues surrounding some of the defenses she discusses, including the multiple personality disorder defense. That defense poses fascinating philosophical and criminological issues, since the "alternate personality" who committed the crime is still part of the defendant's self, though perhaps alienated from the "higher" personae who are more capable of controlling their actions. Kirwin believes psychopaths should be punished for their crimes; what about a psychopathic "alternate personality"? A lot more could have been said here; overall Kirwin just skims the surface.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating tour for the general reader., February 5, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Mad, the Bad, and the Innocent, The: The Criminal Mind on Trial - Tales of a Forensic Psychologist (Hardcover)
When a murderer pleads insanity in the New York City area, he is likely to meet Barbara Kirwin.
A forensic psychologist of great experience, she skillfully employs the standard tools of her profession: and her own highly refined judgement, to help determine the degree of legal responsibility for criminal acts, usually murder.
In her highly readable memoir, Kirwin uses several cases from her personal experience to illustrate the uses and abuses of the insanity defense; just and humane in some cases, wildly inappropriate in others. She exposes the dangerous folly of the lawyer-created "designer defense", and delineates carefully the dividing lines between the mad and the psychopaths who manipulate the system to evade responsibility for their acts. The author ends with a "manifesto for sanity" in which she makes some recommendations which should be carefully studied by policy-makers and anyone else concerned with public safety and humane treatment of the genuinely mentally ill. Highly recommended.

(The "score" rating is an ineradicable feature of the page. This reviewer does not "score" books.)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good discussion of items that often get overlooked., October 1, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Mad, the Bad, and the Innocent, The: The Criminal Mind on Trial - Tales of a Forensic Psychologist (Hardcover)
I thought the book was well written and explained much about psychiatry and the law that gets overlooked with the parades of experts and media saturation that frequently accompany reporting of sensational and grisly crimes. Dr. Kirwin's criticism of "designer defenses" was very good and showed the extent to which their use (or misuse) makes it more difficult for those criminal defendants who truly have mental illnesses. I particularly agreed with Dr. Kirwin's recommendation that television cameras be barred from courtrooms, as some states (like Pennsylvania) and federal courts continue to do. I recommend it for any reader who is interested in knowing about a very controversial topic.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A good voice of common sense., May 2, 1999
Excellent book dealing with topics such as faking bad and faking good, malingering, and understanding of the workings of the criminal mind as s/he comes into contact with the justice system. Other important issues are discussed such as the effect of the media in the courtroom, and the question of common sense at the end of the day after all the legalise has said its piece. Other highlights include reaction of jurors and judges in the face of the presentations layers make who are essentially interested in winning for their client. A justice system should be able to come to the truth and act on that at the end of the day, rather than how good ones lawyer is.
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16 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Should be called "Why I think the legal system is Wrong", February 5, 1999
This review is from: Mad, the Bad, and the Innocent, The: The Criminal Mind on Trial - Tales of a Forensic Psychologist (Hardcover)
I picked this book up hoping it would be about the criminal mind, as the title suggests. Instead it is mostly Dr. Kirwin's thoughts about how the legal system treats mentally ill patients unfairly. This is all prpbably true, but it is NOT what the title implies. She just goes on and on about lack of funding and peoples reaction to a not guilty by insanity plea. She talks more about the legal system than about the criminal mind. I wanted a book that talked about why criminals act the way they do. This was not it.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Criminals Don't Just Surface, March 23, 1999
This book doesn't contain a lot of great information, but it DOES make a few great points. Dr. Kirwin makes a fine statement when she says "Any criminal is a long time in the making, and there are many clear signs along the way." Amen, sister! One of the biggest responsibilities society has shirked is admitting when a failure is in the making. Law enforcement would also benefit by NOT believing serial killers are quiet, unknown men who live unseen in the community. Bullfeathers! They are the outstanding weirdoes that we pretend don't exist. Dr. Kirwin also hits hard on the lack of accountability in the judicial system. As she puts it "no continuity, no follow-up." Pat Brown/Director/Investigative Criminal Profiler/The Sexual Homicide Exchange, Inc.
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Fair, January 22, 2007
By 
David Blanton (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Dr. Barbara Kirwin draws on her years of experience as a forensic psychologist to talk about some of the the most eyebrow-raising cases of the past 20 years where the insanity defense was used and abused.
She has seen a lot in her line of work and readers will appreciate her insider's view, but too much of this cheap book is a wordy and repetitive diatribe against the criminal justice system. Her memory is keen and I do not question her credentials as a psychologist, but she is neither philosophical nor wise enough to be a social critic. Much of the book is like listening to a child whine about a denied sundae.
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4 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Heraldo Rivera show in 300 page format, May 15, 1998
This review is from: Mad, the Bad, and the Innocent, The: The Criminal Mind on Trial - Tales of a Forensic Psychologist (Hardcover)
Could be titled " The omnipotence of me " the biography of Dr. Kirwin. The author tends to embrace that which she condemns in others in that by poking holes in the professional diagnosis of other equally accredited members of the psych. community one must consider the potential falability of her arguement from their professional viewpoint. Some interesting behind the scenes of high profile cases. A snoozer for the most part. As they say in the movie industry, this one is a rental not a keeper.
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Mad, the Bad, and the Innocent, The: The Criminal Mind on Trial - Tales of a Forensic Psychologist
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