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ARTICLE |

CRIME AND INSANITY.

JAMA. 1889;XIII(18):637-638. doi:10.1001/jama.1889.02401140023004.
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ABSTRACT

The universal testimony of all who have paid attention to the subject, is that insanity is incomparably more frequent among the inmates of prisons than in the general population. While one insane person to three hundred would be considered a large proportion of insane in a community, careful observers have found from 3 to 5 per cent. of prisoners to be either insane or imbecile. Such a state of affairs can only be accounted for on the supposition that very many convicts are either insane or strongly predisposed to insanity at the time of their conviction, or that there is something in the influence of prision life specially favorable to the development of mental derangement. Doubtless all of these elements contribute to the result. Frequently as the plea of insanity has been abused to defeat the ends of justice, there can, unfortunately, be no doubt that it is far from

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