State v. Jacob

669 P.2d 865, 1983 Utah LEXIS 1140
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1983
Docket18173
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 669 P.2d 865 (State v. Jacob) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jacob, 669 P.2d 865, 1983 Utah LEXIS 1140 (Utah 1983).

Opinions

OAKS, Justice:

This case concerns the continued confinement of a criminal defendant found not guilty by reason of insanity. Defendant appeals the court’s refusal to release him [867]*867after the first annual recovery hearing prescribed by statute. U.C.A., 1953, § 77-14-5.

I.

Defendant is 27 years of age. For ten years, he has suffered from paranoid schizophrenia. Because of this condition, he was discharged from the Air Force in 1971 and treated at various public and private institutions on numerous occasions since that time. In 1975, obsessed with the idea of evil around him, he made ineffectual attempts to commandeer a Strategic Air Command bomber to blow up the world. He later stole a shotgun and shells from a sporting goods store, fired a shot into the air, and then attempted to shoot approaching policemen. The gun jammed. He was charged with burglary, theft, and aggravated assault, and found not guilty by reason of insanity. The record is silent on whether that finding resulted in any confinement. His sexual obsessions have manifested themselves in various deviant behaviors including exhibitionism, transvestism, verbal abuse of women pedestrians, and one self-confessed (and apparently minor) attempted sexual assault. He has also been obsessed with the idea of what it would be like to “carve a woman’s body off the bones and then put it on .... ”

The five psychologists and psychiatrists who examined defendant and testified or submitted reports in this case all concluded that he has a tendency to react to his frustrations with potentially deadly force and, without the treatment discussed below, is very dangerous to himself and to those around him.

On the evening of September 21, 1979, the Salt Lake City Fire Department extinguished a fire in four rooms and a hall on the third floor of an apartment house near the University of Utah. When interviewed in the ensuing investigation, defendant stated that he had started the fire because he wanted to kill himself. He was charged with aggravated arson and confined in the county jail without posting bond for about three months. Then, by order of court (to avoid deterioration in his condition), he was confined in the Utah State Hospital.

Taking the ease on stipulated facts (including reports on the findings of two psychiatrists who had examined defendant, and the parties’ agreement that defendant “had an absolute defense” of insanity under U.C.A., 1953, § 76-2-305), the district court found defendant not guilty by reason of insanity. On May 6, 1980, the court appointed two experts to help the court determine “whether or not the defendant has fully recovered his sanity,” as required by the statute then in force. § 77-24-15 (subsequently repealed). If recovered, defendant would be discharged from custody. If not, he would be committed to the Utah State Hospital. The court’s order defined “sanity” for this purpose as whether defendant “is no longer a danger to himself or others.” Pending that determination, defendant remained at the Utah State Hospital.

At the hearing on July 18, 1980, the court received written reports from two psychologists and oral testimony from Dr. Brech Lebegue, medical director of the forensic unit at the Utah State Hospital and director of forensic psychiatric services at the University of Utah Hospital. Defendant was present and represented by counsel. The facts were essentially undisputed: Defendant continued to suffer from paranoid schizophrenia, but with the appropriate dosage (which had now been identified) of neuro-leptic drugs every two weeks his behavioral symptoms and hence his dangerousness to himself and others would be very unlikely to recur. However, experience with defendant (as with other schizophrenics) indicated that he could not be relied upon to continue to take his medication upon release from the hospital, and without that medication the dangerous symptoms would recur within a short time. (Hospital records showed ten occasions prior to the present confinement when defendant had voluntarily taken himself off medication when released from the hospital.)

Much of the hearing was a dialogue between the psychiatrist, the court, and coun[868]*868sel on the meaning of recovery of “sanity” under the statute and whether the law would permit defendant to be released on condition that he take the prescribed medication. All parties’ desire for a “middle ground” or a “less restrictive alternative” between compulsory confinement and absolute release was evident throughout, as was the fact that this case was being put forward as a test case to clarify how the law would be applied to medical advances in the ability to control the symptoms of schizophrenia but not to “cure” it.

The hearing was also complicated by the fact that, effective as of July 1, 1980, the operative standard had been amended from “sanity” to “whether the defendant has recovered from his mental illness.” § 77-14-5. The parties took issue over which standard governed the disposition of this defendant.

On January 30, 1981, the court ordered that defendant be released from the custody of the Utah State Hospital upon the terms and conditions specified by its staff and under the supervision of Adult Parole and Probation “under the specific condition by this Court that he be maintained on antipsychotic medicine at a level which enables him to remain sane,” failing which he would immediately be returned to the custody of the Utah State Hospital. Thereafter, both the hospital staff and Adult Parole and Probation declined to perform supervisory duties for defendant outside of the State Hospital because they believed they lacked statutory authority to do so. Finding this objection well taken, the court later vacated its order of conditional release as incapable of execution.

In July 1981, pursuant to a motion by defendant’s counsel, the court held the annually available hearing on whether defendant had recovered sufficiently to be released. § 77-14-5(2) (renumbered in 1983 amendment as § 77-14-5(3)). Defendant told the court that he felt well when he was on medication. Two psychiatrists testified, each essentially confirming their joint written report to the court that the psychological manifestations of defendant’s chronic paranoid schizophrenia “are in remission on medication” and that his condition “is the best it has been,” but that his “underlying biochemical disorder” has not been cured. As a result, the doctors’ report concludes, “we cannot certify to the Court that he has recovered from his mental illness.”

The court’s memorandum decision of August 7, 1981, contains this summary of the problem presented by this case (defendant’s appeal is from this order):

The defendant suffers from a chronic mental illness which apparently has a biochemical cause and psychological and behavioral manifestations. He is not now, and will in all likelihood never be, recovered from the biochemical aspects of the disease. However, it appears that so long as he receives an appropriate maintenance dosage of medication, his psychological and behavioral manifestations disappear. Historically, he has on many occasions failed to maintain his medication level when not institutionalized, and he has consequently (and in every instance) become psychotic. In that condition, there is no question, based upon the historical information, that he is extraordinarily dangerous to others and to himself.
Under the circumstances just described, this court

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Related

State v. Murphy
760 P.2d 280 (Utah Supreme Court, 1988)
State v. Lindquist
674 P.2d 1234 (Utah Supreme Court, 1983)
State v. Jacob
669 P.2d 865 (Utah Supreme Court, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
669 P.2d 865, 1983 Utah LEXIS 1140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jacob-utah-1983.