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Dissociative identity disorder: No excuse for criminal activity

Formerly called multiple personality disorder, dissociative identity disorder (DID) is a controversial diagnosis that challenges forensic psychiatrists, other mental health clinicians, legal professionals, the media, and the public. DID cases often present in the criminal justice system rather than in the mental health system, and the illness perplexes experts in both professions.

Individuals may commit criminal acts while in a dissociated state. A study that tracked 21 reported DID cases found that 47% of men and 35% of women reported engaging in criminal activity, including 19% of men and 7% of women who committed homicide.1 Defendants occasionally use DID as a basis for pleading not guilty by reason of insanity (NGRI). Controversy over the DID diagnosis has contributed to debates about the disorder’s role in criminal responsibility.

The DID diagnosis

An American Psychiatric Association Work Group has proposed new diagnostic criteria for DID for DSM-5, which is scheduled to be published in May 2013.2 Presently, DID is listed in DSM-IV-TR as an axis I disorder.3 Criteria for DID include the presence of ≥2 distinctive identities or personality states that recurrently take control of an individual’s behavior (Table 1).3 This is accompanied by an inability to recall important personal information to an extent that cannot be explained by ordinary forgetfulness. Patients with DID typically have a primary identity that is passive, dependent, guilty, and depressed, and alternate identities with characteristics that differ from the primary identity, commonly in reported age and gender, vocabulary, general knowledge, or predominant affect.3

 

Dissociative pathology may result from trauma, comorbid mental illness, or other medical issues, including complex partial seizures. Developmental theorists have proposed that severe sexual, physical, or psychological trauma in childhood predisposes an individual to develop DID.4 Theoretically, harm by a trusted caregiver forces a child to split off awareness and memory of the trauma to survive in the relationship. Later these memories and feelings are experienced as a separate personality. Because this process happens repeatedly, the patient develops multiple personalities; each has different memories and performs different functions, which may be helpful or destructive. Later, dissociation becomes a coping mechanism when individuals face stressful situations.5

Personality traits that may predispose patients to develop a dissociative disorder include mental absorption, suggestibility, ability to be easily hypnotized, and tendency to fantasize.6 Patients with dissociation also may meet criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder, borderline personality disorder, somatoform disorder, eating disorder, or substance use disorders.7

Table 1

DSM-IV-TR criteria for dissociative identity disorder

 

The presence of ≥2 distinct identities or personality states, each with its own relatively enduring pattern of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the environment and self
At least 2 of these identities or personality states must recurrently take control of the person’s behavior
An inability to recall important personal information that is too extensive to be explained by ordinary forgetfulness
The disturbance is not due to the direct physiological effects of substance or a general medical condition. In children, the symptoms are not attributable to imaginary playmates or other fantasy play
Source: Reference 3

DID and NGRI

An insanity defense is raised in <1% of felony cases, and is successful in only a fraction of those.8 A criminal defendant who claims NGRI asserts that he committed the offense and asks the court to find him not culpable because of his mental state when the offense occurred.

The legal approach used by the defense in cases of NGRI due to DID will be determined by the jurisdiction in which the case is tried. The “Alter-in-control” approach considers the key issue as which “alter” (personality) was in control at the time of the offense and whether he or she met the insanity standard, the “Each-alter” approach considers whether each personality met the insanity standard, and the “Host-alter” approach considers whether the dominant or primary personality met the insanity standard.9

Legal and mental health professionals are divided on whether DID warrants an acquittal for insanity. The first time DID was recognized as a mental disorder that could excuse criminal responsibility occurred in State v Milligan (1978).10 The court declared serial rapist Billy Milligan insane due to lack of one integrated personality and therefore not culpable of the crimes he committed. Public outrage was extraordinary. Since this case, most DID defenses have not been successful (Table 2).10-16

 

 

 

In a 1980 court case,11 a defendant charged with murder pleaded NGRI due to having multiple personalities. The court found that having alter personalities was not necessarily a mental disease that would preclude responsibility for the murder.

In State v Grimsley (1982),12 the defense used NGRI due to multiple personalities in a drunk driving case. The court ruled that it is immaterial what state of consciousness or personality the defendant was in as long as the personality controlling the behavior was conscious and aware of his or her actions.

In Kirkland v State (1983),13 attorneys for a woman who committed a bank robbery asserted an insanity defense based on a psychogenic fugue, which is sudden, unexpected travel away from home accompanied by inability to recall one’s past and confusion about identity or assumption of a new identity.3 The court found that the law adjudges criminal liability according to the person’s state of mind at the time of the act and will not inquire whether an individual possesses other personalities, fugues, or even moods in which he would not have performed the crime.

In State v Jones (1988),14 the court found the defendant guilty of murdering a woman he met at a bar despite expert testimony that his multiple personalities “paralyzed” him from knowing right from wrong.

More recently, courts have rejected the admissibility of DID evidence, including expert testimony, because the scientific evidence failed to meet reliability standards, and therefore is not ultimately useful to the judge or jury. In State v Greene (1998),15 the defendant claimed that 1 of his 24 alters was responsible for killing his therapist. The Supreme Court of Washington affirmed that evidence of Mr. Greene’s DID, including expert testimony, was not reliable and not admissible.

Similarly, in State v Lockhart (2000),16 Mr. Lockhart contested his conviction of first degree sexual assault on the basis that he was not permitted to present evidence of DID to support his insanity defense. The West Virginia Court held that the diagnosis of DID was speculative and therefore did not meet reliability standards for evidence.

Table 2

Using dissociative identity disorder* as a basis for not guilty by reason of insanity

 

CaseYearChargeDefenseCourt ruling
State v Milligan101978RapeNGRI-MPDLack of an integrated personality meant the defendant was not culpable
State v Darnall111980MurderNGRI-MPDMultiple personalities do not preclude criminal responsibility
State v Grimsley121982Drunk drivingNGRI-MPD; primary personality had no control over the ‘alter’State of consciousness or personality of defendant is immaterial
Kirkland v State131983Bank robberyNGRI-psychogenic fugueLaw does not inquire about other personalities, fugue states, or moods in cases of criminal liability
State v Jones141988MurderNGRI-MPDAlter personalities will not be an excuse for inability to distinguish right from wrong
State v Greene151998MurderNGRI-DID; primary personality was ‘unconscious’Evidence of DID, including expert testimony, was not admissible because it did not meet reliability standards
State v Lockhart162000Sexual assaultNGRI-DIDDID was not allowed into evidence by the West Virginia Court due to lack of scientific evidence
*Dissociative identity disorder formerly was referred to as multiple personality disorder
DID: dissociative identity disorder; MPD: multiple personality disorder; NGRI: not guilty by reason of insanity.

Evaluating DID

Because the courts may ask psychiatrists to provide expert opinion on DID to assist with legal rulings, clinicians must remain vigilant to the possibility of DID as well as to defendants who may malinger multiple personalities to evade punishment. In such situations, factors to consider include the mental status examination, data and history collection, collateral information, criminal background, mental health history, history of abuse, and objective assessment tools.

Extensive field testing has shown that the Structured Clinical Interview for Dissociative Disorders (SCID-D) has good reliability and excellent validity.17 The SCID-D allows a trained interviewer to assess the severity of 5 dissociative symptoms: amnesia, depersonalization, derealization, identity confusion, and identity alteration.17 Other tools that may help assess a patient with suspected DID are listed in Table 3.

 

Patients who commit criminal acts while in a dissociated state may assert a defense of NGRI due to DID, but rarely has this defense been successful. Although a patient may have distinct personalities that control his or her behavior, this condition does not preclude criminal responsibility.

The role of hypnosis in evaluating DID is controversial. The introduction of pseudo-memories and potential for iatrogenic DID may complicate the clinical presentation and subsequent diagnosis.18

Table 3

Tools for diagnosing dissociative identity disorder

 

Structured Clinical Interview for Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative Disorder Interview Schedule
Dissociative Experiences Scale
Childhood Trauma Questionnaire
 

 

Related Resource

 

  • West S, Noffsinger S. Is this patient not guilty by reason of insanity? Current Psychiatry. 2006;5(8):54-62.

Disclosure

Dr. Farrell reports no financial relationship with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

References

 

1. Putnam. Diagnosis and treatment of multiple personality disorder. New York, NY: The Guilford Press; 1989.

2. American Psychiatric Association. DSM-5 Development. 300. 14. Dissociative identity disorder. Proposed revision. Available at: http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=57. Accessed April 22 2011.

3. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 4th ed, text rev. Washington DC: American Psychiatric Association; 2000.

4. Sadock BJ, Sadock VA. eds. Dissociative disorders. In: Sadock BJ, Sadock VA, eds. Kaplan & Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry. 7th ed. New York, NY: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2000:1544–1576.

5. Lyons-Ruth K, Dutra L, Schuder MR, et al. From infant attachment disorganization to adult dissociation: relational adaptations or traumatic experiences? Psychiatr Clin North Am. 2006;29(1):63-86, viii.

6. Brahams D. Automatism and post-traumatic stress disorder. Lancet. 1990;335(8701):1333.-

7. Simeon D, Guralnik O, Knutelska M, et al. Personality factors associated with dissociation: temperament, defenses, and cognitive schemata. Am J Psychiatry. 2002;159(3):489-491.

8. Perlin M. The jurisprudence of the insanity defense. Durham NC: Carolina Academic Press; 1994.

9. Steinberg M, Bancroft J, Buchanan J. Multiple personality disorder in criminal law. Bull Am Acad Psychiatry Law. 1993;21(3):345-356.

10. State v Milligan, No 77-CR-11-2908 (Franklin County, Ohio, December 4 1978).

11. State v Darnall, 47 Or App 161, 614 P2d 120 (1980).

12. State v Grimsley, 3 Ohio App 3d 165 444 NE2d 1071 (1982).

13. Kirkland v State, 166 Ga App 478, 304 SE2d 561 (1983).

14. State v Jones, 743 P2d 176 (Wash Ct App 1987) aff’d, 759 P2d 1183, 1185 (Wash 1998).

15. State v Greene, 92 Wn App 80, 960 P2d 980 (1998).

16. State v Lockhart, 208 W Va 622 (2000).

17. Steinberg M, Rounsaville B, Cicchetti D. Detection of dissociative disorders in psychiatric patients by a screening instrument and a structured diagnostic interview. Am J Psychiatry. 1991;148(8):1050-1054.

18. Putnam FW. Dissociative phenomena. In: Tasman A ed. Annual review of psychiatry. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press; 1991:145–160.

Author and Disclosure Information

Helen M. Farrell, MD
Forensic Psychiatry Fellow, University Of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH

This article was revised on January 26, 2024.

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Legacy Keywords
dissociative identity disorder;criminal activity;Helen Farrell;multiple personality disorder;DID;controversial;criminal justice system;dissociated state;not guilty reason of insanity;NGRI;insanity defense;dissociative pathology;trauma;comorbid mental illness;seizures;personality traits;court cases;court rulings;pseudomemories;iatrogenic DID
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Author and Disclosure Information

Helen M. Farrell, MD
Forensic Psychiatry Fellow, University Of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH

This article was revised on January 26, 2024.

Author and Disclosure Information

Helen M. Farrell, MD
Forensic Psychiatry Fellow, University Of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH

This article was revised on January 26, 2024.

Formerly called multiple personality disorder, dissociative identity disorder (DID) is a controversial diagnosis that challenges forensic psychiatrists, other mental health clinicians, legal professionals, the media, and the public. DID cases often present in the criminal justice system rather than in the mental health system, and the illness perplexes experts in both professions.

Individuals may commit criminal acts while in a dissociated state. A study that tracked 21 reported DID cases found that 47% of men and 35% of women reported engaging in criminal activity, including 19% of men and 7% of women who committed homicide.1 Defendants occasionally use DID as a basis for pleading not guilty by reason of insanity (NGRI). Controversy over the DID diagnosis has contributed to debates about the disorder’s role in criminal responsibility.

The DID diagnosis

An American Psychiatric Association Work Group has proposed new diagnostic criteria for DID for DSM-5, which is scheduled to be published in May 2013.2 Presently, DID is listed in DSM-IV-TR as an axis I disorder.3 Criteria for DID include the presence of ≥2 distinctive identities or personality states that recurrently take control of an individual’s behavior (Table 1).3 This is accompanied by an inability to recall important personal information to an extent that cannot be explained by ordinary forgetfulness. Patients with DID typically have a primary identity that is passive, dependent, guilty, and depressed, and alternate identities with characteristics that differ from the primary identity, commonly in reported age and gender, vocabulary, general knowledge, or predominant affect.3

 

Dissociative pathology may result from trauma, comorbid mental illness, or other medical issues, including complex partial seizures. Developmental theorists have proposed that severe sexual, physical, or psychological trauma in childhood predisposes an individual to develop DID.4 Theoretically, harm by a trusted caregiver forces a child to split off awareness and memory of the trauma to survive in the relationship. Later these memories and feelings are experienced as a separate personality. Because this process happens repeatedly, the patient develops multiple personalities; each has different memories and performs different functions, which may be helpful or destructive. Later, dissociation becomes a coping mechanism when individuals face stressful situations.5

Personality traits that may predispose patients to develop a dissociative disorder include mental absorption, suggestibility, ability to be easily hypnotized, and tendency to fantasize.6 Patients with dissociation also may meet criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder, borderline personality disorder, somatoform disorder, eating disorder, or substance use disorders.7

Table 1

DSM-IV-TR criteria for dissociative identity disorder

 

The presence of ≥2 distinct identities or personality states, each with its own relatively enduring pattern of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the environment and self
At least 2 of these identities or personality states must recurrently take control of the person’s behavior
An inability to recall important personal information that is too extensive to be explained by ordinary forgetfulness
The disturbance is not due to the direct physiological effects of substance or a general medical condition. In children, the symptoms are not attributable to imaginary playmates or other fantasy play
Source: Reference 3

DID and NGRI

An insanity defense is raised in <1% of felony cases, and is successful in only a fraction of those.8 A criminal defendant who claims NGRI asserts that he committed the offense and asks the court to find him not culpable because of his mental state when the offense occurred.

The legal approach used by the defense in cases of NGRI due to DID will be determined by the jurisdiction in which the case is tried. The “Alter-in-control” approach considers the key issue as which “alter” (personality) was in control at the time of the offense and whether he or she met the insanity standard, the “Each-alter” approach considers whether each personality met the insanity standard, and the “Host-alter” approach considers whether the dominant or primary personality met the insanity standard.9

Legal and mental health professionals are divided on whether DID warrants an acquittal for insanity. The first time DID was recognized as a mental disorder that could excuse criminal responsibility occurred in State v Milligan (1978).10 The court declared serial rapist Billy Milligan insane due to lack of one integrated personality and therefore not culpable of the crimes he committed. Public outrage was extraordinary. Since this case, most DID defenses have not been successful (Table 2).10-16

 

 

 

In a 1980 court case,11 a defendant charged with murder pleaded NGRI due to having multiple personalities. The court found that having alter personalities was not necessarily a mental disease that would preclude responsibility for the murder.

In State v Grimsley (1982),12 the defense used NGRI due to multiple personalities in a drunk driving case. The court ruled that it is immaterial what state of consciousness or personality the defendant was in as long as the personality controlling the behavior was conscious and aware of his or her actions.

In Kirkland v State (1983),13 attorneys for a woman who committed a bank robbery asserted an insanity defense based on a psychogenic fugue, which is sudden, unexpected travel away from home accompanied by inability to recall one’s past and confusion about identity or assumption of a new identity.3 The court found that the law adjudges criminal liability according to the person’s state of mind at the time of the act and will not inquire whether an individual possesses other personalities, fugues, or even moods in which he would not have performed the crime.

In State v Jones (1988),14 the court found the defendant guilty of murdering a woman he met at a bar despite expert testimony that his multiple personalities “paralyzed” him from knowing right from wrong.

More recently, courts have rejected the admissibility of DID evidence, including expert testimony, because the scientific evidence failed to meet reliability standards, and therefore is not ultimately useful to the judge or jury. In State v Greene (1998),15 the defendant claimed that 1 of his 24 alters was responsible for killing his therapist. The Supreme Court of Washington affirmed that evidence of Mr. Greene’s DID, including expert testimony, was not reliable and not admissible.

Similarly, in State v Lockhart (2000),16 Mr. Lockhart contested his conviction of first degree sexual assault on the basis that he was not permitted to present evidence of DID to support his insanity defense. The West Virginia Court held that the diagnosis of DID was speculative and therefore did not meet reliability standards for evidence.

Table 2

Using dissociative identity disorder* as a basis for not guilty by reason of insanity

 

CaseYearChargeDefenseCourt ruling
State v Milligan101978RapeNGRI-MPDLack of an integrated personality meant the defendant was not culpable
State v Darnall111980MurderNGRI-MPDMultiple personalities do not preclude criminal responsibility
State v Grimsley121982Drunk drivingNGRI-MPD; primary personality had no control over the ‘alter’State of consciousness or personality of defendant is immaterial
Kirkland v State131983Bank robberyNGRI-psychogenic fugueLaw does not inquire about other personalities, fugue states, or moods in cases of criminal liability
State v Jones141988MurderNGRI-MPDAlter personalities will not be an excuse for inability to distinguish right from wrong
State v Greene151998MurderNGRI-DID; primary personality was ‘unconscious’Evidence of DID, including expert testimony, was not admissible because it did not meet reliability standards
State v Lockhart162000Sexual assaultNGRI-DIDDID was not allowed into evidence by the West Virginia Court due to lack of scientific evidence
*Dissociative identity disorder formerly was referred to as multiple personality disorder
DID: dissociative identity disorder; MPD: multiple personality disorder; NGRI: not guilty by reason of insanity.

Evaluating DID

Because the courts may ask psychiatrists to provide expert opinion on DID to assist with legal rulings, clinicians must remain vigilant to the possibility of DID as well as to defendants who may malinger multiple personalities to evade punishment. In such situations, factors to consider include the mental status examination, data and history collection, collateral information, criminal background, mental health history, history of abuse, and objective assessment tools.

Extensive field testing has shown that the Structured Clinical Interview for Dissociative Disorders (SCID-D) has good reliability and excellent validity.17 The SCID-D allows a trained interviewer to assess the severity of 5 dissociative symptoms: amnesia, depersonalization, derealization, identity confusion, and identity alteration.17 Other tools that may help assess a patient with suspected DID are listed in Table 3.

 

Patients who commit criminal acts while in a dissociated state may assert a defense of NGRI due to DID, but rarely has this defense been successful. Although a patient may have distinct personalities that control his or her behavior, this condition does not preclude criminal responsibility.

The role of hypnosis in evaluating DID is controversial. The introduction of pseudo-memories and potential for iatrogenic DID may complicate the clinical presentation and subsequent diagnosis.18

Table 3

Tools for diagnosing dissociative identity disorder

 

Structured Clinical Interview for Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative Disorder Interview Schedule
Dissociative Experiences Scale
Childhood Trauma Questionnaire
 

 

Related Resource

 

  • West S, Noffsinger S. Is this patient not guilty by reason of insanity? Current Psychiatry. 2006;5(8):54-62.

Disclosure

Dr. Farrell reports no financial relationship with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

Formerly called multiple personality disorder, dissociative identity disorder (DID) is a controversial diagnosis that challenges forensic psychiatrists, other mental health clinicians, legal professionals, the media, and the public. DID cases often present in the criminal justice system rather than in the mental health system, and the illness perplexes experts in both professions.

Individuals may commit criminal acts while in a dissociated state. A study that tracked 21 reported DID cases found that 47% of men and 35% of women reported engaging in criminal activity, including 19% of men and 7% of women who committed homicide.1 Defendants occasionally use DID as a basis for pleading not guilty by reason of insanity (NGRI). Controversy over the DID diagnosis has contributed to debates about the disorder’s role in criminal responsibility.

The DID diagnosis

An American Psychiatric Association Work Group has proposed new diagnostic criteria for DID for DSM-5, which is scheduled to be published in May 2013.2 Presently, DID is listed in DSM-IV-TR as an axis I disorder.3 Criteria for DID include the presence of ≥2 distinctive identities or personality states that recurrently take control of an individual’s behavior (Table 1).3 This is accompanied by an inability to recall important personal information to an extent that cannot be explained by ordinary forgetfulness. Patients with DID typically have a primary identity that is passive, dependent, guilty, and depressed, and alternate identities with characteristics that differ from the primary identity, commonly in reported age and gender, vocabulary, general knowledge, or predominant affect.3

 

Dissociative pathology may result from trauma, comorbid mental illness, or other medical issues, including complex partial seizures. Developmental theorists have proposed that severe sexual, physical, or psychological trauma in childhood predisposes an individual to develop DID.4 Theoretically, harm by a trusted caregiver forces a child to split off awareness and memory of the trauma to survive in the relationship. Later these memories and feelings are experienced as a separate personality. Because this process happens repeatedly, the patient develops multiple personalities; each has different memories and performs different functions, which may be helpful or destructive. Later, dissociation becomes a coping mechanism when individuals face stressful situations.5

Personality traits that may predispose patients to develop a dissociative disorder include mental absorption, suggestibility, ability to be easily hypnotized, and tendency to fantasize.6 Patients with dissociation also may meet criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder, borderline personality disorder, somatoform disorder, eating disorder, or substance use disorders.7

Table 1

DSM-IV-TR criteria for dissociative identity disorder

 

The presence of ≥2 distinct identities or personality states, each with its own relatively enduring pattern of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the environment and self
At least 2 of these identities or personality states must recurrently take control of the person’s behavior
An inability to recall important personal information that is too extensive to be explained by ordinary forgetfulness
The disturbance is not due to the direct physiological effects of substance or a general medical condition. In children, the symptoms are not attributable to imaginary playmates or other fantasy play
Source: Reference 3

DID and NGRI

An insanity defense is raised in <1% of felony cases, and is successful in only a fraction of those.8 A criminal defendant who claims NGRI asserts that he committed the offense and asks the court to find him not culpable because of his mental state when the offense occurred.

The legal approach used by the defense in cases of NGRI due to DID will be determined by the jurisdiction in which the case is tried. The “Alter-in-control” approach considers the key issue as which “alter” (personality) was in control at the time of the offense and whether he or she met the insanity standard, the “Each-alter” approach considers whether each personality met the insanity standard, and the “Host-alter” approach considers whether the dominant or primary personality met the insanity standard.9

Legal and mental health professionals are divided on whether DID warrants an acquittal for insanity. The first time DID was recognized as a mental disorder that could excuse criminal responsibility occurred in State v Milligan (1978).10 The court declared serial rapist Billy Milligan insane due to lack of one integrated personality and therefore not culpable of the crimes he committed. Public outrage was extraordinary. Since this case, most DID defenses have not been successful (Table 2).10-16

 

 

 

In a 1980 court case,11 a defendant charged with murder pleaded NGRI due to having multiple personalities. The court found that having alter personalities was not necessarily a mental disease that would preclude responsibility for the murder.

In State v Grimsley (1982),12 the defense used NGRI due to multiple personalities in a drunk driving case. The court ruled that it is immaterial what state of consciousness or personality the defendant was in as long as the personality controlling the behavior was conscious and aware of his or her actions.

In Kirkland v State (1983),13 attorneys for a woman who committed a bank robbery asserted an insanity defense based on a psychogenic fugue, which is sudden, unexpected travel away from home accompanied by inability to recall one’s past and confusion about identity or assumption of a new identity.3 The court found that the law adjudges criminal liability according to the person’s state of mind at the time of the act and will not inquire whether an individual possesses other personalities, fugues, or even moods in which he would not have performed the crime.

In State v Jones (1988),14 the court found the defendant guilty of murdering a woman he met at a bar despite expert testimony that his multiple personalities “paralyzed” him from knowing right from wrong.

More recently, courts have rejected the admissibility of DID evidence, including expert testimony, because the scientific evidence failed to meet reliability standards, and therefore is not ultimately useful to the judge or jury. In State v Greene (1998),15 the defendant claimed that 1 of his 24 alters was responsible for killing his therapist. The Supreme Court of Washington affirmed that evidence of Mr. Greene’s DID, including expert testimony, was not reliable and not admissible.

Similarly, in State v Lockhart (2000),16 Mr. Lockhart contested his conviction of first degree sexual assault on the basis that he was not permitted to present evidence of DID to support his insanity defense. The West Virginia Court held that the diagnosis of DID was speculative and therefore did not meet reliability standards for evidence.

Table 2

Using dissociative identity disorder* as a basis for not guilty by reason of insanity

 

CaseYearChargeDefenseCourt ruling
State v Milligan101978RapeNGRI-MPDLack of an integrated personality meant the defendant was not culpable
State v Darnall111980MurderNGRI-MPDMultiple personalities do not preclude criminal responsibility
State v Grimsley121982Drunk drivingNGRI-MPD; primary personality had no control over the ‘alter’State of consciousness or personality of defendant is immaterial
Kirkland v State131983Bank robberyNGRI-psychogenic fugueLaw does not inquire about other personalities, fugue states, or moods in cases of criminal liability
State v Jones141988MurderNGRI-MPDAlter personalities will not be an excuse for inability to distinguish right from wrong
State v Greene151998MurderNGRI-DID; primary personality was ‘unconscious’Evidence of DID, including expert testimony, was not admissible because it did not meet reliability standards
State v Lockhart162000Sexual assaultNGRI-DIDDID was not allowed into evidence by the West Virginia Court due to lack of scientific evidence
*Dissociative identity disorder formerly was referred to as multiple personality disorder
DID: dissociative identity disorder; MPD: multiple personality disorder; NGRI: not guilty by reason of insanity.

Evaluating DID

Because the courts may ask psychiatrists to provide expert opinion on DID to assist with legal rulings, clinicians must remain vigilant to the possibility of DID as well as to defendants who may malinger multiple personalities to evade punishment. In such situations, factors to consider include the mental status examination, data and history collection, collateral information, criminal background, mental health history, history of abuse, and objective assessment tools.

Extensive field testing has shown that the Structured Clinical Interview for Dissociative Disorders (SCID-D) has good reliability and excellent validity.17 The SCID-D allows a trained interviewer to assess the severity of 5 dissociative symptoms: amnesia, depersonalization, derealization, identity confusion, and identity alteration.17 Other tools that may help assess a patient with suspected DID are listed in Table 3.

 

Patients who commit criminal acts while in a dissociated state may assert a defense of NGRI due to DID, but rarely has this defense been successful. Although a patient may have distinct personalities that control his or her behavior, this condition does not preclude criminal responsibility.

The role of hypnosis in evaluating DID is controversial. The introduction of pseudo-memories and potential for iatrogenic DID may complicate the clinical presentation and subsequent diagnosis.18

Table 3

Tools for diagnosing dissociative identity disorder

 

Structured Clinical Interview for Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative Disorder Interview Schedule
Dissociative Experiences Scale
Childhood Trauma Questionnaire
 

 

Related Resource

 

  • West S, Noffsinger S. Is this patient not guilty by reason of insanity? Current Psychiatry. 2006;5(8):54-62.

Disclosure

Dr. Farrell reports no financial relationship with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

References

 

1. Putnam. Diagnosis and treatment of multiple personality disorder. New York, NY: The Guilford Press; 1989.

2. American Psychiatric Association. DSM-5 Development. 300. 14. Dissociative identity disorder. Proposed revision. Available at: http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=57. Accessed April 22 2011.

3. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 4th ed, text rev. Washington DC: American Psychiatric Association; 2000.

4. Sadock BJ, Sadock VA. eds. Dissociative disorders. In: Sadock BJ, Sadock VA, eds. Kaplan & Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry. 7th ed. New York, NY: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2000:1544–1576.

5. Lyons-Ruth K, Dutra L, Schuder MR, et al. From infant attachment disorganization to adult dissociation: relational adaptations or traumatic experiences? Psychiatr Clin North Am. 2006;29(1):63-86, viii.

6. Brahams D. Automatism and post-traumatic stress disorder. Lancet. 1990;335(8701):1333.-

7. Simeon D, Guralnik O, Knutelska M, et al. Personality factors associated with dissociation: temperament, defenses, and cognitive schemata. Am J Psychiatry. 2002;159(3):489-491.

8. Perlin M. The jurisprudence of the insanity defense. Durham NC: Carolina Academic Press; 1994.

9. Steinberg M, Bancroft J, Buchanan J. Multiple personality disorder in criminal law. Bull Am Acad Psychiatry Law. 1993;21(3):345-356.

10. State v Milligan, No 77-CR-11-2908 (Franklin County, Ohio, December 4 1978).

11. State v Darnall, 47 Or App 161, 614 P2d 120 (1980).

12. State v Grimsley, 3 Ohio App 3d 165 444 NE2d 1071 (1982).

13. Kirkland v State, 166 Ga App 478, 304 SE2d 561 (1983).

14. State v Jones, 743 P2d 176 (Wash Ct App 1987) aff’d, 759 P2d 1183, 1185 (Wash 1998).

15. State v Greene, 92 Wn App 80, 960 P2d 980 (1998).

16. State v Lockhart, 208 W Va 622 (2000).

17. Steinberg M, Rounsaville B, Cicchetti D. Detection of dissociative disorders in psychiatric patients by a screening instrument and a structured diagnostic interview. Am J Psychiatry. 1991;148(8):1050-1054.

18. Putnam FW. Dissociative phenomena. In: Tasman A ed. Annual review of psychiatry. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press; 1991:145–160.

References

 

1. Putnam. Diagnosis and treatment of multiple personality disorder. New York, NY: The Guilford Press; 1989.

2. American Psychiatric Association. DSM-5 Development. 300. 14. Dissociative identity disorder. Proposed revision. Available at: http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevisions/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=57. Accessed April 22 2011.

3. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. 4th ed, text rev. Washington DC: American Psychiatric Association; 2000.

4. Sadock BJ, Sadock VA. eds. Dissociative disorders. In: Sadock BJ, Sadock VA, eds. Kaplan & Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry. 7th ed. New York, NY: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2000:1544–1576.

5. Lyons-Ruth K, Dutra L, Schuder MR, et al. From infant attachment disorganization to adult dissociation: relational adaptations or traumatic experiences? Psychiatr Clin North Am. 2006;29(1):63-86, viii.

6. Brahams D. Automatism and post-traumatic stress disorder. Lancet. 1990;335(8701):1333.-

7. Simeon D, Guralnik O, Knutelska M, et al. Personality factors associated with dissociation: temperament, defenses, and cognitive schemata. Am J Psychiatry. 2002;159(3):489-491.

8. Perlin M. The jurisprudence of the insanity defense. Durham NC: Carolina Academic Press; 1994.

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15. State v Greene, 92 Wn App 80, 960 P2d 980 (1998).

16. State v Lockhart, 208 W Va 622 (2000).

17. Steinberg M, Rounsaville B, Cicchetti D. Detection of dissociative disorders in psychiatric patients by a screening instrument and a structured diagnostic interview. Am J Psychiatry. 1991;148(8):1050-1054.

18. Putnam FW. Dissociative phenomena. In: Tasman A ed. Annual review of psychiatry. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press; 1991:145–160.

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Current Psychiatry - 10(06)
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Current Psychiatry - 10(06)
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Dissociative identity disorder: No excuse for criminal activity
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Dissociative identity disorder: No excuse for criminal activity
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dissociative identity disorder;criminal activity;Helen Farrell;multiple personality disorder;DID;controversial;criminal justice system;dissociated state;not guilty reason of insanity;NGRI;insanity defense;dissociative pathology;trauma;comorbid mental illness;seizures;personality traits;court cases;court rulings;pseudomemories;iatrogenic DID
Legacy Keywords
dissociative identity disorder;criminal activity;Helen Farrell;multiple personality disorder;DID;controversial;criminal justice system;dissociated state;not guilty reason of insanity;NGRI;insanity defense;dissociative pathology;trauma;comorbid mental illness;seizures;personality traits;court cases;court rulings;pseudomemories;iatrogenic DID
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