No Error in Barring Expert Testimony on Asperger's Disorder When Defendant Did Not Assert a Mental Illness Defense
In State v. Anderson, 789 N.W.2d 227 (Minn. 2010), the Minnesota Supreme Court held that it was not an abuse of discretion to bar a defendant in his murder case from presenting expert testimony regarding Asperger's disorder. The defendant did not assert a mental illness defense, and, because it was not relevant, the trial court's exclusion of expert psychiatric testimony at trial did not violate the defendant's rights.
Facts of the Case
In October 2007, police officers in Savage, Minnesota, received a phone call that a discarded purse, belonging to Ms. Katherine Olson, had been found. Police contacted Ms. Olson's roommate, who reported that Ms. Olson had traveled to Savage in response to an online advertisement for a babysitting job. A few days later, police located Ms. Olson's car and found her body in the trunk. Ms. Olson's autopsy indicated that she died of a gunshot wound; the manner of death was homicide.
The police reviewed Ms. Olson's e-mail inbox and learned that she had responded to an advertisement from “Amy” requesting a babysitter. Ms. Olson's phone records revealed that her last call was to a Michael Anderson. The police investigation revealed that he had made numerous online postings for female models, sexual encounters, and babysitters and had posed as “Amy” in several emails regarding a request for babysitting services.
The police took custody of Mr. Anderson on the basis of a missing-person investigation. He was read his Miranda rights, and he admitted that he made online postings, admitted that he was present when Ms. Olson was killed, and stated that a friend of his “thought it would be funny” to kill Ms. Olson. Extensive forensic DNA and ballistics evidence tied him to the crime. A grand jury indicted him for first-degree premeditated murder and second-degree intentional murder.
Initially, Mr. Anderson pleaded not guilty by reason of mental illness. Two defense experts diagnosed Asperger's disorder. Two court-ordered experts concluded that he did not have Asperger's and was not mentally ill. He withdrew his mental illness defense and entered a plea of not guilty. At trial, he argued that expert psychiatric testimony should be permitted, to demonstrate how Asperger's affected his cognitive and physical capacities. The trial court denied the motion to admit expert testimony. The jury found him guilty of all charges, and he was sentenced to life in prison without possibility of release. He appealed to the Minnesota Supreme Court.
Ruling
In a unanimous decision, the Minnesota Supreme Court held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion or deny Mr. Anderson a fair trial by excluding expert psychiatric testimony about Asperger's, because he did not assert a mental illness defense. Minnesota does not recognize the doctrine of diminished capacity, and no exception to excluding expert testimony applied in this case.
Reasoning
Mr. Anderson raised three issues related to the exclusion of expert psychiatric testimony in his case. First, he asserted that testimony on Asperger's was necessary to explain his physical appearance, mannerisms, and lack of empathy. Because there was no evidence to explain his appearance and behavior, he argued, he was prevented from testifying and was thus deprived of a fair trial. The trial court's exclusion of expert testimony is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
The court acknowledged that Mr. Anderson had a constitutional right to present a meaningful defense, but added that the right is not unlimited. A trial court may exclude expert testimony when the court determines that the evidence would not be helpful to the jury or when the probative value is outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice or confusion. The court relied on evidence from the trial court that there was nothing particularly unusual about Mr. Anderson's physical appearance or mannerisms at trial. Based on the trial court's observations and risk of confusing the jury, the court concluded that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the expert testimony.
Second, Mr. Anderson alleged that expert testimony on Asperger's was necessary to negate the mens rea for murder. He argued that, absent psychiatric testimony, the jury would presume that his brain functioned and premeditated normally. In responding to this assertion, the Minnesota Supreme Court relied on two cases as precedent: State v. Provost, 490 N.W.2d 93 (Minn. 1992), and State v. Brom, 463 N.W.2d 758 (Minn. 1990). Minnesota does not recognize the doctrine of diminished capacity.
In Provost, the court held that psychiatric opinion testimony was not admissible on whether a defendant had the capacity to form the requisite subjective state of mind. Nor was it admissible on the ultimate question of whether a defendant had the requisite mens rea when he committed the crime. In Brom, the court considered a slightly different issue, whether a defendant could present expert evidence on premeditation (rather than intent). The court concluded that there was no meaningful distinction between intent and premeditation for the purpose of admitting psychiatric testimony and prohibited both in the guilt phase of the trial.
In applying the holdings in Provost and Brom, the court concluded that exclusion of psychiatric expert testimony did not violate Mr. Anderson's right to a fair trial. Because Minnesota does not recognize diminished capacity, the jury could only find Mr. Anderson legally sane or insane; accordingly, mental capacity testimony was irrelevant.
Third, Mr. Anderson argued that his situation fell within a recognized exception to exclusion of psychiatric testimony. In Provost, the court stated that expert testimony may be allowed in rare cases in which a mental disorder, characterized by the formation of a particular subjective state of mind, is inconsistent with the particular mens rea, or the defendant has a history of mental illness and testimony is needed to explain the “whole man” before the crime. Here, the court stated that Mr. Anderson failed to show how Asperger's prevents a person from premeditating or forming intent; thus the first exception did not apply. The court similarly rejected his claim based on a history of mental illness because he had no documented history of mental illness before his crime. In fact, the question of Asperger's never arose before it was suggested by defense-employed exerts.
The Minnesota Supreme Court affirmed Mr. Anderson's conviction and sentencing.
Discussion
The central issue in this case is the extent to which psychiatric testimony can be presented when a defendant elects no mental illness defense. This question is not new to the courts, and states have taken different approaches to it. According to Dr. Paul Appelbaum (Psychiatr Serv 57:1370–2, 2006), 37 states allow testimony regarding mental disorders to rebut mens rea; 13 states exclude evidence related to the impact of a defendant's mental disorder on mens rea.
The U.S. Supreme Court considered the issue in Clark v. Arizona, 548 U.S. 735 (2006). Eric Clark was charged with murdering Police Officer Jeffrey Moritz in Flagstaff, Arizona. His diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia was not disputed at trial. He pleaded guilty but insane and also planned to show that his schizophrenia precluded him from forming the requisite intent to murder. However, the trial court barred him from presenting mental illness testimony to rebut the requisite mens rea for the crime.
On appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court in Clark upheld an Arizona law that a criminal defendant could not present evidence of his mental illness to negate mens rea. The Court stated that “observational” evidence (direct observations about the defendant's behavior and statements) is permitted to rebut mens rea, but not “mental disease” (expert opinion on mental illness) or “capacity” (capacity for cognition and moral judgment) evidence. The Court held that it was constitutional for states to limit evidence of mental disease solely to questions of insanity and that Arizona's effort to bar diminished capacity as a defense was constitutional.
In Anderson, the court relied on precedent from Provost. In Provost, the court explained that a defendant's capacity for forming criminal intent is determined from what a defendant says and does: the “physical evidence” of the defendant's actions and demeanor. Similar to the Clark Court's use of observational evidence, this “physical evidence” is “lay evidence” that is admitted in any criminal case and allows the trier-of-fact to make a decision without the need for expert testimony.
This case also outlined Minnesota's exceptions to excluding expert psychiatric testimony as articulated by Provost. One of the exceptions is when a defendant has a history of mental illness and testimony about the illness would describe “the whole man” before the crime. In Anderson, the court relied on the fact that Mr. Anderson had no prior mental health records. Of interest, the court did not discuss the fact that Asperger's is a pervasive disorder that, by nature of the diagnosis, he would have had before the crime. It is not uncommon for forensic evaluators to see persons in the legal system who have never had a diagnosis of mental illness, but meet the criteria for a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder diagnosis. In this case, the court appeared to apply the exception narrowly.
- © 2012 American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law