- Joined
- Dec 28, 2014
Hinckley was pretty much the poster child for doing away with that particular definition of legal insanity. Most states currently use something like the classic M'Naghten rule, also known as the wild beast rule, which is that the person is on the level of a wild animal and literally incapable of morality.A lot of confusion stems from the 70s and 80s where the standard for insanity had more to do with whether or not your mental illness heavily influenced your crime, but after some notorious cases the feds and pretty much every state introduced a higher standard.
The fact that Chris knew what he was doing was illegal to the point that he lied about it more or less disqualifies him.
Virginia's standards are slightly more loose than that, but not to the point where Chris qualifies in the least. He knew it was illegal to fuck his mom, he lied about it, while in jail he changed his story to fit his legal situation, and despite knowing it was illegal to fuck his mom, he did it anyway and tried, albeit in his retarded way, to cover it up.
He quite possibly had the option to take such a plea and tarded out and refused it. I doubt that is going to be on the table again.I think the prosecutors probably made that a condition for any plea; don't think there is any chance they would allow him to plea and NOT register.