The Nature of Attacks and Attackers' Psychiatric Status
Case | Year | Name | Age | Attack | Psychiatric Status | Disposal |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1778 | Rebecca O'Hara | 30s | Knife attack as George III alighted from carriage at St. James' Palace | Delusional conviction that she was true queen | Committed to Bedlam, where she remained deluded |
2 | 1786 | Margaret Nicholson | 45 years | Attempted to stab George III as he entered St. James' Palace | Chronic petitioner; delusional beliefs | Committed to Bedlam, where she remained deluded until her death in 1828 |
3 | 1790 | John Frith | 30 years | Threw a stone at the royal carriage | At trial, gave a delusional account of his motivation for attack | Found unfit to plead and committed to an asylum |
4 | 1800 | James Hadfield | 29 years | Shot at George III in Drury Lane Theatre | Had serious head injury sustained while a soldier in the recent war with France; a postmortem many years later revealed extensive damage to the nondominant frontal temporal area; deluded | Found insane and committed to Bedlam, where he remained actively psychotic |
5 | 1801 | Catherine Kirby | ? | Threw stones at George III in the street | Considered too insane to be tried; deluded | Committed permanently to Bedlam |
6 | 1801 | Urban Metcalf | 25 years | Attacked George III with knife at the theatre | A six-year history of periods of psychotic excitement (probably manic) interspersed with relative normality; deluded | In and out of Bedlam until finally and permanently committed to York asylum in 1822 |
7 | 1832 | Dennis Collins | 60 years | Threw flint at William IV at the Ascot Races | Insanity plea based only on counsel's assertion of melancholy; rejected | Transportation to Australia |
8 | 1840 | Edward Oxford | 18 years | Fired twice at Queen Victoria's carriage in London | Insanity plea based mainly on evidence from family; found insane | Transferred to Bedlam, but showed no subsequent signs of insanity; released, and emigrated to Australia where he had a successful career as a writer |
9 | 1842 | John Francis | 19 years | Attempted to shoot at Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in the royal carriage | Unhappy, socially isolated youth expressing anger at world in general; no psychiatric disorder found. | Guilty verdict; transported to Australia |
10 | 1842 | John Bean | 18 years | Tried to fire a defective gun at Queen Victoria's carriage | Distressed, isolated youth with antimonarchy sentiments; said he was tired of life and wished for death; no psychotic features | Guilty verdict; imprisoned |
11 | 1849 | William Hamilton | 17 years | Fired on Queen Victoria's carriage | Unemployed, recent immigrant from Ireland; isolated, desperate; no psychotic features | Guilty verdict; transported |
12 | 1850 | Robert Pate | 30 years | Struck Queen Victoria with a brass-topped cane while she was in her carriage | Pleaded insanity, supported by evidence from two leading psychiatrists with no opposing evidence; despite this, found guilty | Transported to Australia |
13 | 1868 | Henry James O'Farrell | 35 years | Shot Queen Victoria's son in the back at the Grand Picnic in Sydney, Australia | Trained for priesthood but became increasingly odd and withdrawn. Said to have developed “religious mania”17,18; diary discovered after the attack described as a “jumble of clearly lunatic ravings”; not psychiatrically evaluated (probably due to political interference) | Found guilty and executed |
14 | 1872 | Arthur O'Connor | 17 years | Entered the grounds of Buckingham Palace and pointed a gun at Queen Victoria | Insanity defense supported by several eminent psychiatrists, but O'Connor sabotaged their attempt by pleading guilty; deluded | Transported to Australia, but returned and again attempted to enter Buckingham Palace; this time committed permanently to Hanwell Asylum as deluded and insane |
15 | 1882 | Roderick Maclean | 28 years | Fired a pistol at Queen Victoria as she sat in her carriage at Windsor Station | Prior history of admissions to lunatic asylums; unanimous opinion of four psychiatrists who examined him after the attack was that he was deluded; found insane | Committed to Broadmore Asylum for criminal lunatics |
16 | 1936 | Jerome Bannigam, aka Patrick McMahon | 34 years | Raised a loaded revolver at Edward VIII who was riding in royal procession after trooping of the colours | Habitually drifted ‘into a state of phantasy whence he emerges with his persecutory ideas woven into a tissue of malicious defamation of others.’ Not certifiable. | Sentenced to 2 years' hard labor |
17 | 1974 | Ian Ball | 20 years | Attempted to kidnap Princess Anne; shot and seriously injured two protection officers and two bystanders who came to the aid of the princess | Prior history of psychiatric disorder; deluded; diagnosed schizophrenia | Committed to Broadmoor Hospital where he remains |
18 | 1981 | Marcus Sargeant | 17 years | Fired blanks at Queen Elizabeth on Horseguards' Parade at the trooping of the colours | Discharged from army after 3 months; attempted unsuccessfully to join police and fire brigade; fascinated by previous assassinations; wanted to become famous; refused psychiatric evaluation | Imprisoned; some years later committed to a psychiatric hospital; religious delusions |
19 | 1986 | Christopher John Lewis | 17 years | Fired a rifle at Queen Elizabeth on a visit to Dunedin in New Zealand | Extremist right-wing views; history of offending; no psychiatric evaluation before trial | Imprisoned; later transferred to secure psychiatric hospital; wrote an autobiography19; eventually committed suicide |
20 | 1986 | Alfred Adcock | 57 years | Indecently assaulted Diana Princess of Wales at a public function | Long history of psychiatric admissions; deluded; diagnosed schizophrenia | Committed to secure psychiatric hospital |
21 | 1990 | Henearoachuca Tepou | 27 years | Threw wet T-shirt at Queen Elizabeth on a visit to New Zealand | Activist for Maori rights; no psychiatric disorder | Noncustodial sentence |
22 | 1994 | David Kang | 23 years | Fired starting pistol at Charles, Prince of Wales, on visit to Australia | Activist for refugee's rights; history of treatment for depressive illness; hoped to be shot by police | Guilty; noncustodial sentence |
23 | 1994 | Castilav Bracanov | 58 years | Sprayed Prince Charles with an aerosol on New Zealand visit | Antiroyalist; eccentric, but not psychotic | Noncustodial sentence |
Details of the psychiatric status of the attackers and their eventual disposal. There is sufficient information to regard the attackers as psychotic at the time of 11 incidents (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 12, 14, 15, 17, 20). There is a history of psychiatric disorder characterized by delusional ideas, either before or subsequent to the attack in a further two cases (13 and 18), although evidence for the attackers' state of mind when they attacked is absent. A further two cases (19 and 22) had received psychiatric treatment.