| Literature DB >> 19668341 |
Ceri Evans1, Gillian Mezey, Anke Ehlers.
Abstract
Amnesia for the perpetration of violent offences is an important issue in medico-legal proceedings. Previous studies of amnesia have mainly relied on selected groups of unconvicted offenders, which raises the question of how reliable the findings are. The purpose of this study was to examine the prevalence and phenomenological qualities of amnesia in violent offenders. In semi-structured interviews with 105 young offenders convicted of serious violence, 20 (19%) reported partial amnesia for their offence and only one (1%) reported complete amnesia. Amnesia was associated with high alcohol intake, emotional ties to the victim, and cognitive processing during the assault. Complete amnesia for violent crime appears to be less frequent than suggested by previous reports using unconvicted samples. The findings have implications for the clinical assessment of claimed amnesia for violent crime and are potentially of medico-legal significance.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19668341 PMCID: PMC2720170 DOI: 10.1080/14789940802234471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Forens Psychiatry Psychol ISSN: 1478-9949
Demographic and assault characteristics.
| Variable | No amnesia group | Amnesia group | Statistic | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years: mean | 19.7 (0.92) | 19.6 (.89) | .89 | |
| Ethnicity: | χ21 = 6.03 | .01 | ||
| Caucasian | 58 (69) | 20 (95.2) | ||
| Non-Caucasian | 26 (31) | 1 (4.8) | ||
| Education: | χ21 = 101 | .32 | ||
| No qualifications | 54 (64.3) | 11 (52.4) | ||
| GCSE/equivalent or above | 30 (35.7) | 10 (47.6) | ||
| Age finished in years: mean (SD) | 15.0 (1.7) | 14.8 (1.1) | .54 | |
| Employment status: | χ21 = .47 | .63 | ||
| Employed/student | 41 (48.8) | 12 (57.1) | ||
| Unemployed/not at school | 43 (51.2) | 9 (42.9) | ||
| Relationship status: | χ21 = .04 | .84 | ||
| Current partner | 50 (59.5) | 12 (57.1) | ||
| No current partner | 33 (40.5) | 9 (42.9) | ||
| Religious affiliation: | FE test | .07 | ||
| No affiliation | 65 (77.4) | 20 (95.2) | ||
| Affiliation | 19 (22.6) | 1 (4.8) | ||
| Criminal record: | χ21 = .01 | .92 | ||
| No convictions | 25 (29.8) | 6 (28.6) | ||
| Previous convictions | 59 (70.2) | 15 (71.4) | ||
| Prior imprisonment: | χ21 = .17 | .68 | ||
| No | 56 (66.7) | 13 (61.9) | ||
| Yes | 28 (33.3) | 8 (38.1) | ||
| Prior violent offence: | χ21 = .09 | .77 | ||
| No | 47 (56) | 11 (52.4) | ||
| Yes | 37 (44) | 10 (47.6) | ||
| Intelligence (Quick Test) | .39 | |||
| Mean (SD) | 84.1 (8.7) | 85.8 (6.6) | ||
| PTSD symptoms | ||||
| (PSS-I): mean (SD) without amnesia item | 5.4 (6.4) | 6.0 (6.0) | .70 | |
| Victim | FE test | .04 | ||
| No emotional ties | 78 (92.9) | 16 (76.2) | ||
| Emotional ties | 6 (7.1) | 5 (23.8) | ||
| Duration of assault | χ21 = .09 | .76 | ||
| Five minutes or less | 55 (65.5) | 13 (61.9) | ||
| More than five minutes | 29 (34.5) | 8 (38.1) | ||
| Use of weapon | χ21 = .012 | .91 | ||
| No | 23 (28.4) | 6 (28.6) | ||
| Yes | 58 (71.6) | 8 (38.1) | ||
| Location of the assault | χ21 = .33 | .57 | ||
| Public place | 65 (77.4) | 15 (71.4) | ||
| Victim's or offender's place | 19 (22.6) | 6 (28.6) | ||
| Provocation | ||||
| No | 14 (16.7) | 1 (4.8) | FE | .29 |
| Yes | 70 (83.3) | 20 (95.2) | ||
| Alcohol intake | χ21 = 7.7 | .005 | ||
| < Four units in previous six hours | 40 (47.6) | 3 (14.3) | ||
| Four + units in previous six hours | 44 (52.4) | 18 (85.7) | ||
| Illegal drug use | χ21 = 1.16 | .28 | ||
| None in previous six hours | 47 (56.0) | 9 (42.9) | ||
| Drug use in previous six hours | 37 (44.0) | 12 (57.1) | ||
| Planning: mean (SD) | 11.94 (22.32) | 6.76 (15.88) | .32 | |
| Intent to seriously injure | 3.76 (2.27) | 3.62 (2.38) | .80 | |
| Intent to kill | 2.02(1.89) | 1.90 (1.73) | .80 |
1Rated on a 100-point percentage scale ranging from no forethought, planning, or preparation to detailed forethought, planning, and preparation;
2Measured on a seven-point Likert scale (ranging from ‘totally disagree’, through neutral, to ‘totally agree’).
Reported memory gaps for the amnesia group.
| Case | Complete or partial | % missing | Amnesic gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Complete | 100 | Cannot recall kicking victim in head several times (out of character). Recalls co-defendant throwing victim, then no memory. |
| 4 | Partial | 35 | Cannot recall jumping on victim's chest or other people fighting. Hit on head with plastic piping, knocked out briefly. Patchy memory loss. |
| 9 | Partial | 10 | Can recall all of assault except for the second of two punches he landed, confirmed on CCTV. One small, clear gap. |
| 13 | Partial | 75 | Can only recall one of several stab wounds inflicted on victim. Cannot recall family of victim being present. Only has ‘two pictures’ of assault. |
| 15 | Partial | 20 | Cannot recall slashing victim with knife dropped by victim but can remember chasing him. Remembers jogging away afterwards. |
| 25 | Partial | 80–90 | Cannot recall most of assault (punched and kicked victim). Recalls walking towards victim; next recall is putting rope around neck at end. |
| 27 | Partial | 20–30 | Cannot recall stabbing victim. Can remember confronting him and then recalls victim holding neck on ground. Cannot recall next one to two hours. |
| 35 | Partial | 40 | Cannot remember threatening victim, getting knife from home, climbing into house, or stabbing the victim several times. |
| 41 | Partial | 50 | Can recall punching victim, then clear gap until stamping on his head. Estimated several minutes missing of assaultative behaviour |
| 45 | Partial | 50 | Cannot recall knife being put in his hand, stabbing victim several times, or any noises from the assault (‘felt like I went deaf’). |
| 46 | Partial | 50 | Cannot recall kicking victim, chasing him, rolling around on ground, giving him ‘verbals’, or spitting on him. Patchy recall of being violent. |
| 47 | Partial | 50 | Remembers being hit by victim, then gap until seeing victim on ground. Cannot remember stabbing him with bottle in head, or later behaviour. |
| 48 | Partial | 30 | Remembers confronting victim. Cannot recall jumping around or stabbing him in face. ‘Seeing red … blanked out for about one minute.’ |
| 54 | Partial | 20 | Has patchy recall of assaulting victim in a pub. Cannot recall how many times he was taken out of pub and went back in. |
| 59 | Partial | 90 | Recalls argument with victim and punching him, but cannot recall then attacking him with a knife. Clear gap until he saw victim lying on floor. |
| 68 | Partial | 50 | Patchy recall of extended fight between victim and respondent and his co-defendant. Can only recall a only few of multiple stab wounds caused. |
| 76 | Partial | 50 | Can recall striking victim on head with bar, but not then punching and kicking him in the head and threats to kill. Recalls arrest. |
| 89 | Partial | 40-50 | Recalls punching victim in the face, then dense memory gap until he came around with victim lying unconscious in his lap, stabbed twice. |
| 96 | Partial | 70 | No recall of first stabbing; then can recall first stabs but not the next several. Cannot recall where he threw the knife or getting home. |
| 98 | Partial | Unsure | Recalls holding victim with rope and stabbing first few times, but not the next several times. ‘Blackout’ until he saw victim dead on floor. |
| 101 | Partial | Unsure | Can recall hitting victim with bottle on head but cannot recall stabbing him in face several times. Can remember being arrested. |
1As judged by the interviewer: any recall of assaultative behaviour indicated that the amnesia was partial;
2Percentage missing of the actual assault, as estimated by the participant on the basis of their knowledge of their own assaultative behaviour from third-party information, including witnesses and medico-legal information.
Amnesia group differences in cognitive processing and emotions at time of offence.
| Variable | No amnesia group | Amnesia group | Statistic | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cognitive processing | F(2,102) = 3.58 | .031 | ||
| Dissociation PDEQ (without amnesia item 8) | 1.57 (0.46) | 1.85 (0.42) | F(l,103) = 6.31 | .014 |
| Lack of self-referent processing | 1.33 (1.05) | 1.90 (1.06) | F(l,103) = 4.90 | .029 |
| Memory disorganisation | F(2,100) = 10.19 | <.0005 | ||
| Global rating | 3.90 (1.22) | 5.62 (2.48) | F(1,101) = 20.38 | <.0005 |
| Composite fragmentation score | 0.13 (1.47) | 0.49 (1.94) | F(l,101) = 2.60 | .110 |
| Emotional factors | F(6,98) = 1.92 | .085 | ||
| Helpless | 1.18 (1.02) | 1.41 (1.14) | ||
| Fear | 1.04 (1.25) | 1.19 (1.40) | ||
| Anger | 2.20 (1.16) | 2.42 (1.03) | ||
| Shame | 0.84 (1.13) | 1.38 (1.49) | ||
| Brave | 1.05 (1.03) | 0.83 (0.71) | ||
| Calm | 0.76 (0.88) | 1.24 (1.38) | ||
| Cognitions during assault | F(3,101) = 3.01 | .034 | ||
| Perceived control | 2.85 (1.35) | 1.91 (0.88) | F(1.103) = 9.20 | .003 |
| Victim status | 2.94 (1.60) | 2.92 (1.76) | F(1,103) = .004 | .952 |
| Perceived threat | 2.49 (1.64) | 2.69 (1.94) | F(1,103) = .22 | .660 |
1Related univariate analyses were not conducted because multivariate analysis was not significant.
Logistic regression analysis: predicting amnesia.
| Variables entered | NR2 | −2LL | Block df | Block χ2 | % correctly Classified | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Block 1: clinical factors | .205 | 90.49 | 3 | 14.60 | .002 | 82 |
| Current psychiatric medication | ||||||
| Previous psychiatric history | ||||||
| Ethnic origin | ||||||
| Block 2: alcohol | .268 | 85.56 | 1 | 4.93 | .026 | 82 |
| Alcohol intake prior to offence, four units or more | ||||||
| Block 3: victim relationship | .323 | 81.11 | 1 | 4.45 | .035 | 85 |
| Emotional ties to victim | ||||||
| Block 4: cognitive processing | .377 | 76.45 | 1 | 4.66 | .031 | 86 |
| Composite of peritraumatic dissociation without amnesia item and lack of self-referent processing | ||||||
| Block 5: cognitive appraisals | .425 | 72.20 | 1 | 4.25 | .039 | 87 |
| Perceived loss of control |
aNagelkerke R2;
b−2 log likelihood.