TexMex
Punishment is justice for the unjust.
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Latest on Dietz testimony
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/071506dntexyates.1175d59c.html
HOUSTON - A mentally ill person who believes God is ordering him to commit a crime is insane "if a person is of a faith that God is good and infallible," a forensic psychiatrist testified Friday during Andrea Yates' second murder trial.
But Yates, who believed Satan wanted her to drown her five children in the bathtub, knew that her actions were wrong and therefore is not legally insane, Dr. Park Dietz said.
Dietz said his opinion about Yates also is based on her statements that she knew her thoughts were bad and that killing the children was a sin, said Dietz, who evaluated Yates more than four months after the June 20, 2001, drownings.
"She had obsessions about a thing (hurting her children) for years, and at some point concluded that it must be Satan," Dietz said Friday, testifying in the prosecution's rebuttal phase under cross-examination by the defense.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/071506dntexyates.1175d59c.html
HOUSTON - A mentally ill person who believes God is ordering him to commit a crime is insane "if a person is of a faith that God is good and infallible," a forensic psychiatrist testified Friday during Andrea Yates' second murder trial.
But Yates, who believed Satan wanted her to drown her five children in the bathtub, knew that her actions were wrong and therefore is not legally insane, Dr. Park Dietz said.
Dietz said his opinion about Yates also is based on her statements that she knew her thoughts were bad and that killing the children was a sin, said Dietz, who evaluated Yates more than four months after the June 20, 2001, drownings.
"She had obsessions about a thing (hurting her children) for years, and at some point concluded that it must be Satan," Dietz said Friday, testifying in the prosecution's rebuttal phase under cross-examination by the defense.