Brain scans have big implications for U.S. courts
Last Updated: 2007-10-31 10:14:29 -0400 (Reuters Health)
By Martha Graybow
NEW YORK (Reuters) - It was one of the worst killing
rampages in U.S. history. In August 1966, Charles Whitman murdered his
wife and his mother, then climbed a tower at the University of Texas
and used a high-powered rifle to fatally shoot 14 more people before
being killed by police.
He left a note that said, "I cannot rationally pinpoint any specific
reason for doing this." An autopsy later revealed he had a brain tumor,
which some experts said may have affected his actions.
At the time, there was no way to detect such a tumor without
surgery. But today, scientists have developed noninvasive brain scans
that may reveal whether a person has a brain abnormality that could
affect decision-making or trigger violence, with huge implications for
the law.
Neuroscientists use functional magnetic resonance imaging techniques
-- in which a person's head is put in a machine like a giant magnet --
to gaze deep within the brain to view neural regions that monitor
behavior and regulate emotions.
It is a young field, but one that ultimately could have as dramatic
an impact on the legal system as DNA testing, said Michael Gazzaniga,
the director of a new project to study the implications of neuroscience
for the U.S. judicial system.
Neuroscience "is all about understanding brain mechanisms that
underlie behavior," said Gazzaniga, who heads the Sage Center for the
Study of the Mind at the University of California in Santa Barbara.
In the Whitman case, it's impossible to know for sure if the tumor
led to his actions, but there is now strong scientific evidence that
the presence of brain abnormalities "does increase the probability of
doing something violent," said Gazzaniga, who is a psychology professor.
The science, however, poses deep challenges for the legal system,
which may confront a flood of criminal defendants armed with brain
scanning results who try to argue that they shouldn't be held
responsible for crimes.
It also raises complex issues of free will and privacy, such as
whether society should try to institutionalize people whose brain scans
indicate defects that may predispose them to violence.
"We have to examine very carefully how to use that information in a
meaningful way," Gazzaniga said. "Someone who has an abnormal brain
function may commit a crime, but there are a lot of people with that
same brain lesion that don't engage in criminal activity."
$10 MILLION PROJECT
The Law and Neuroscience Project (http://www.lawandneuroscienceproject.org),
supported through a three-year, $10 million grant from the MacArthur
Foundation, has gathered together scientists, legal scholars and
philosophers from more than a dozen universities nationwide, as well as
several judges.
Organizers of the project, whose honorary chair is former Supreme
Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, say they will address issues such as
when brain-scanning images can be introduced in court and how the
prison system should deal with convicted criminals who have brain
abnormalities.
Already, courts are seeing more cases in which defendants want to
use brain scans as mitigating evidence. In early October, a Florida
appeals court rejected arguments by a man convicted of murder and
robbery who contended that his lawyer hurt his case by not trying to
introduce brain imaging results that the defendant believed would have
shown that Ecstasy and other drugs he took hindered his rational
thinking.
The technology could also transform civil suits, such as when trying
to determine whether a car accident victim in a personal injury case is
truly still in pain.
"Is there real pain there or is it put on?" Gazzaniga said. It may
be possible "to put them in a scanner and see if we can detect pain
centers lighting up."
Neuroscience, though, clearly poses challenges for the law, which
has traditionally taken a rather clear-cut view of responsibility:
people either commit acts intentionally or they do not.
But as neuroscientists discover more about how our brains affect
behavior, the line between guilt and innocence gets fuzzier, said Jed
Rakoff, a U.S. District Judge in New York who sits on the project's
board.
"I don't want to overstate the situation, but the long-term
implications are that the legal system becomes much more nuanced in the
way it evaluates responsibility," he said. "It's not so easy to say an
act is either intentional or wasn't intentional. What do you do with an
in-between possibility?"
Rakoff, though, said that ushering neuroscience into the courtroom
does not mean defendants with brain abnormalities should get a free
ride.
He said neuroscience is leading to findings about substance abusers,
for example, that suggest the roots of addiction lie within the brain.
Treating the problem can require a drug addict to undergo a much longer
program than the inpatient drug programs that courts now require.
Rakoff said that there is also sure to be "a lot of junk science"
that lawyers will attempt to introduce based on neuroscientific
findings. A goal of the project, he and others say, will be to give
judges guidelines about using the new science.
"We hope that by the end of the three-year period it will be clear
that neuroscience can be useful for the law when it is appropriately
applied," said MacArthur President Jonathan Fanton. "This is a science
that has come along dramatically in recent years and we think if
properly used it can make our justice system more fair, compassionate,
but also more rational."