INDEPENDENT NEWS

Time For Rational Law On Mad Defence

Published: Fri 26 Apr 2002 11:52 AM
The Claude Gabriel case highlights the need for an end to the extreme difference between the way we treat `bad' killings and `mad' killings, ACT Justice Spokesman MP Stephen Franks said today.
"We should urgently provide for a verdict of guilty but insane.
"Huge resources are poured into lawyers and competing `experts' arguing the difference, when the outcomes for the community and the killer are, or should be, much the same.
"Since the abolition of the death penalty, the social value of legal exploitation of the insanity defence has been dubious. Now the treatment of murder in Mr Goff's Sentencing and Parole Reform Bill makes absurd any substantial waste of legal resources on the distinction between mad and bad. "Life imprisonment" can now mean anything, except life in prison. The Bill means that a mad killer is likely to be locked up for longer than a killer who attracts the Court's sympathy. The current 10-year minimum sentence for murder is abolished.
"A guilty but insane verdict would only affect the kind of institution the killer goes to. Insane killers should not be in prison. But they should be in custody. It may not make an enormous difference. Just as murderers are always at least theoretically subject to recall to complete a life sentence, so should a mad killer be kept locked up or constantly subject to recall, at any time there is any concern about the safety of others.
"ACT raised this simple change during the select committee process. I objected to the deceit in continuing to use the term "life imprisonment" when it can mean anything from one year to 17 years.
"It is still not too late for the government to amend this bill to make sure that in New Zealand at least the outrage of cases like that of Claude Gabriel, cannot happen again. We can save most of the enormous legal aid waste on having judges agonise over the difference between mad and bad," Mr Franks said.
Ends

Next in New Zealand politics

Just 1 In 6 Oppose ‘Three Strikes’ - Poll
By: Family First New Zealand
Budget Blunder Shows Nicola Willis Could Cut Recovery Funding
By: New Zealand Labour Party
Urgent Changes To System Through First RMA Amendment Bill
By: New Zealand Government
Global Military Spending Increase Threatens Humanity And The Planet
By: Peace Movement Aotearoa
Government To Introduce Revised Three Strikes Law
By: New Zealand Government
Environmental Protection Vital, Not ‘Onerous’
By: New Zealand Labour Party
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media