United States v. Amburgey

189 F. Supp. 687, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3236
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 1, 1960
DocketCrim. A. 146-60
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 F. Supp. 687 (United States v. Amburgey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Amburgey, 189 F. Supp. 687, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3236 (D.D.C. 1960).

Opinion

YOUNGDAHL, District Judge.

This case, which presents several important questions in the administration of the Durham 1 rule and the defense of insanity in District of Columbia criminal prosecutions, 2 is before the Court in the form of an alternative motion by the defendant, Calvin T. Amburgey, for judgment of acquittal by reason of insanity, 3 or for a new trial. 4 At the conclusion of the trial, the Court, which heard the case without a jury, found the defendant guilty of forging and uttering four checks, 5 and rejected the defense of insanity.

Before discussing the legal issues posed by this motion, a brief outline of the facts of the case may be helpful:

The defendant stands convicted of forging the name of G. Howland Shaw to four checks taken from Mr. Shaw’s voucher, and of uttering the checks to four separate individuals. The eight offenses took place between November 22 and December 29, 1959; the defendant was arrested and charged with their commission on January 19, 1960.

At his arraignment, defendant indicated that he desired to “plead guilty on the grounds of insanity” because he had “a mental hospitalization background”, and further indicated that he lacked *689 funds to hire an attorney. The Court appointed an attorney and a plea of not guilty was entered.

Within two weeks the court-appointed attorney moved the Court for a mental examination (1) to discover whether defendant was competent to stand trial and (2) to attempt to discover defendant’s mental state at the time the offenses were committed. 6 On March 14, 1960, Chief Judge Pine granted this motion, and pursuant to his order defendant was admitted to St. Elizabeths Hospital. 7

At the end of the ninety days of examination called for by the order, Dr. Over-holser, the Superintendent of St. Eliza-beths, reported to the Court: first, that the defendant was competent to stand trial, and second, that he was

“suffering from a mental disease, Personality Disorder, at the present time and was suffering from this mental disease on [the dates of the alleged offenses]. However, we are unable to express an opinion as to whether or not the alleged crimes were the product of this mental disease.”

No objection having been filed to this finding of competence to stand trial, 8 and defendant having waived his right to a jury, the trial commenced.

That defendant committed the charged crimes was quickly established, for the accounts of the Government’s witnesses on this aspect of the case were not seriously challenged by the defendant. 9

Evidence on the insanity defense, which came first from the complainant, Mr. Shaw, and second, from two psychiatrists-was much less conclusive.

Mr. Shaw commenced his testimony — - which was probably sufficient under the test now recognized to “raise” the insanity defense — by indicating that he had’ tried to help Amburgey find and hold a. job, and that he sometimes had Ambur-gey stay in his home, the better to supervise this project.

Mr. Shaw related that on November 2,. 1959, three weeks before the first forgery charged in the indictment, Amburgey attempted suicide by taking an overdose' of sleeping tablets, and that on the day-following, he had voluntarily committed: himself to the psychiatric division of D. C. General Hospital. This commitment, Mr. Shaw further testified, lasted for two-weeks, terminating when Amburgey “left” the hospital late one night. At. that time, according to Mr. Shaw, a Dr. McAdoo of the staff of D. C. General was-in the process of drawing papers to bring Amburgey before the Mental Health Commission for possible commitment to-St. Elizabeths.

Mr. Shaw also testified to hearsay information that Amburgey had been in an automobile accident in 1955, in which he suffered a crushed skull. Mr. Shaw concluded his testimony by stating that he was “quite convinced that [Amburgey] was mentally ill” at the time of the offenses; when pressed for the basis for this opinion, he pointed to Amburgey’s inability to hold a job; to difficulty in rousing him in the morning; and to “a whole series of bizzare things” he had *690 supposedly done to a Mrs. Meek who had befriended him — 10

“An accumulation of a whole series of incidents, each one of which, perhaps, wasn’t too important, but the cumulative effect of which led me to reach that conclusion.”

Far less satisfactory was the testimony of the two St. Elizabeths’ psychiatrists, Drs. Owens and Klinger, who were called on defendant's behalf. In substance they both testified that as of the dates of the alleged crimes, Amburgey was suffering from a sociopathic personality, anti-social type; that this condition was considered by them and by a majority of American psychiatrists to be a mental disease; that they could express no opinion on whether the crimes in question were the “product” of this condition; and that no treatment was available at St. Elizabeths for it. Dr. Owens indicated that his difficulty in expressing an opinion on productivity was partially caused by the fact that Amburgey had left the District of Columbia after committing the acts — possibly to avoid being apprehended — although the doctor did indicate that apprehension is not generally considered to be a principal subconscious desire of sociopaths. Most of all, the psychiatrists had difficulty in attempting to pinpoint the particular way or ways in which the mental condition of this defendant, diagnosed as a sociopathic personality, anti-social type, differs from that of the “ordinary criminal,” and thus why this condition should be considered a mental disease.

Following the testimony of these two psychiatrists, the Court heard argument from both sides on whether defendant had produced “ ‘some evidence’ of insanity” as required to “raise” the insanity defense, 11 and thus placed the burden on the Government of proving sanity beyond a reasonable doubt as an element of its affirmative case. 12 The Court concluded —on the basis of its study at that time of the relevant decisions of the Court of Appeals of this Circuit — that the defendant had not successfully interposed the defense. The Court read these decisions to require that in order to put the burden of proving sanity on the Government, a defendant produce (1) “some evidence” of mental illness and (2) “some evidence” that the crime in question was the product of the alleged mental illness. 13 In this case the Court felt the defendant had not produced the requisite particularized evidence of productivity— the latter element of the defense. 13a

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Bluebook (online)
189 F. Supp. 687, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-amburgey-dcd-1960.