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EXAMINATION OF THE COMPLAINING WITNESS IN A CRIMINAL COURT
LEO L. ORENSTEIN
Am J Psychiatry 1951;107:684-688.
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The Department of Psychiatry, N. Y. University-Bellevue Medical Center.
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Abstract
The psychiatrist in his approach to the problem of crime finds ample opportunity to examine and evaluate offenders. The possibility of obtaining first hand information from and pertinent to the plaintiff is circumscribed by the "rules." A witness is required to appear in court and testify under oath but we cannot demand of him that he appear for psychiatric examination. This is only one of the many advantages the accuser enjoys over the accused.Substantive and procedural regulations governing the administration of justice place all emphasis on "facts." What is "fact" is left to the judge and jury to decide. The assumption is that fact is a phenomenon in reality. Our experience places us in the group of those who substantially contend that "facts" establishing the guilt of an accused person are not always realistic in nature. This is particularly so in instances where crime has been committed against an individual. The acting out of unconscious drives leads not only to acts of aggression called crime but also to false accusations resulting at times in erroneous convictions of the innocent.Abstract Teaser
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