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1.
J Forensic Sci ; 68(2): 558-567, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36572956

ABSTRACT

Psychopathy is an important forensic mental health construct. Despite this importance, the research base of psychopathy among individuals convicted of capital murder is limited. Archival data were collected from a sample of 636 persons convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in the State of California. Psychopathy was assessed using the Psychopathy Checklist - Revised (PCL-R) instrument. Data on criminal careers and other behavioral disorders were also extracted. The sample mean PCL-R total score was 23.31 (SD = 9.92) and one-third of individuals in this sample were considered clinically psychopathic with PCL-R total scores of 30 or greater. Factor analytic examination yielded support for four facets: affective, interpersonal, lifestyle, and antisocial. Criterion validity findings revealed positive correlations of psychopathy scores with Antisocial Personality Disorder (ρ = 0.72), Conduct Disorder (ρ = 0.46), sexual sadism (ρ = 0.24), Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ρ = 0.20), ADHD (ρ = 0.15), arrest charges (r = 0.56), prison sentences (r = 0.53), and age of arrest onset (r = -0.57). Individuals convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death reflect heterogeneity in psychopathy with some individuals exhibiting pronounced psychopathic features.


Subject(s)
Criminals , Prisoners , Humans , Antisocial Personality Disorder/psychology , Criminals/psychology , Homicide/psychology , Forensic Psychiatry , Forensic Medicine , Prisoners/psychology
2.
Am J Crim Justice ; 47(4): 651-671, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36407839

ABSTRACT

Despite declines in prescription opioid overdoses, rural areas continue to have higher prescription opioid overdose rates than urban areas. We aim to understand high overdose places were resilient to the prescription opioid overdose crisis (better than predicted), while others were vulnerable (worse than predicted). First, we predicted prescription opioid overdose mortality in 2016-18 for N = 2,013 non-metropolitan counties using multivariable regression accounting. Second, we constructed a resiliency-vulnerability typology using observed, predicted, and residual values from the regression. Third, we selected a high-overdose resilient and vulnerable community for case study analysis using interviews, focus groups, and observations. High-overdose resilient and vulnerable places had disability-dispensing-overdose pathways, legacies of mining, and polysubstance drug abuse. Resilient places were larger population micropolitans with extensive health and social services, norms of redemption and acceptance of addiction, and community-wide mobilization of public and non-profit resources. Vulnerable places were smaller, more remote, lacked services, and stigmatized addiction.

3.
Int J Law Psychiatry ; 64: 211-218, 2019.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31122632

ABSTRACT

Researchers have found that legal cynicism is a significant predictor of crime. Although legal cynicism developed as a form of anomie, it is also plausible that legal cynicism is itself a deviant rationalization to justify one's criminal behavior. As such, legal cynicism might be a derivative manifestation of other individual-level constructs that bear on criminal propensity. We test this possibility by controlling for temperament traits related to antisocial behavior and psychopathic personality features in a sample of residentially incarcerated youth (N = 253). Results from negative binomial models revealed that legal cynicism was significantly associated with self-reported delinquency (including violence), but not total arrests. The significant associations with general delinquency and violence held even when controlling for sociodemographic characteristics. However, the associations were rendered either non-significant or greatly attenuated when we included temperament and psychopathy measures in the models. Overall, findings are convergent with the notion that legal cynicism is a consequence or product of antisocial traits and criminal propensity.


Subject(s)
Antisocial Personality Disorder/psychology , Criminal Law , Criminals/psychology , Adolescent , Attitude , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Juvenile Delinquency/psychology , Juvenile Delinquency/statistics & numerical data , Male , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Psychopathology , Temperament , Young Adult
4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28327508

ABSTRACT

Adverse childhood experiences are associated with an array of health, psychiatric, and behavioral problems including antisocial behavior. Criminologists have recently utilized adverse childhood experiences as an organizing research framework and shown that adverse childhood experiences are associated with delinquency, violence, and more chronic/severe criminal careers. However, much less is known about adverse childhood experiences vis-à-vis specific forms of crime and whether the effects vary across race and ethnicity. Using a sample of 2520 male confined juvenile delinquents, the current study used epidemiological tables of odds (both unadjusted and adjusted for onset, total adjudications, and total out of home placements) to evaluate the significance of the number of adverse childhood experiences on commitment for homicide, sexual assault, and serious persons/property offending. The effects of adverse childhood experiences vary considerably across racial and ethnic groups and across offense types. Adverse childhood experiences are strongly and positively associated with sexual offending, but negatively associated with homicide and serious person/property offending. Differential effects of adverse childhood experiences were also seen among African Americans, Hispanics, and whites. Suggestions for future research to clarify the mechanisms by which adverse childhood experiences manifest in specific forms of criminal behavior are offered.


Subject(s)
Antisocial Personality Disorder/psychology , Black or African American , Crime , Criminals , Hispanic or Latino , Juvenile Delinquency/psychology , White People , Adolescent , Adult Survivors of Child Abuse/psychology , Adult Survivors of Child Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Black or African American/psychology , Black or African American/statistics & numerical data , Antisocial Personality Disorder/epidemiology , Child , Child Abuse/psychology , Child Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Crime/psychology , Crime/statistics & numerical data , Criminals/psychology , Criminals/statistics & numerical data , Cross-Sectional Studies , Foster Home Care/psychology , Foster Home Care/statistics & numerical data , Health Surveys , Hispanic or Latino/psychology , Hispanic or Latino/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Juvenile Delinquency/statistics & numerical data , Male , Prisoners/psychology , Prisoners/statistics & numerical data , Risk Factors , Sex Offenses/psychology , Sex Offenses/statistics & numerical data , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , United States , Violence , White People/psychology , White People/statistics & numerical data
5.
Crim Behav Ment Health ; 18(5): 292-305, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19072890

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the institutional behaviour of incarcerated sex offenders. AIM: To study the relationships between juvenile sex offending, thought psychopathology and institutional misconduct. METHOD: We applied negative binomial regression and Area Under Curve Receiver Operating Characteristic (AUC-ROC) analyses to self-report and records data from institutionalised delinquents (N = 813) committed to the California Youth Authority to explore the links between sex offending and institutional misconduct, controlling for offender demographics, institution, index offence, and self-reported and official criminal history. RESULTS: Juvenile sex offending was associated with six forms of institutional misconduct (sexual, general and total misconduct as reviewed by parole board) over 12 and 24 months prior to rating. Two measures of thought psychopathology, which were related to psychosis-like thought, were significantly associated with juvenile sex offender status. These constructs did not, however, mediate the independent predictive effects of adolescent sex offending on institutional misconduct. CONCLUSION: Interventions to help incarcerated young offenders are likely to be particularly important for those with a sex offending history as they are otherwise likely to persist with antisocial behaviours of all kinds within and beyond the institution. Attention to their thought processes may be particularly useful.


Subject(s)
Juvenile Delinquency/psychology , Prisoners/psychology , Sex Offenses/psychology , Thinking , Violence/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , California , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Delusions , Female , Humans , Juvenile Delinquency/rehabilitation , Male , ROC Curve , Regression Analysis , Retrospective Studies , Sex Offenses/prevention & control , Social Alienation , Violence/prevention & control
6.
Psychol Rep ; 100(2): 407-19, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17564215

ABSTRACT

Investigation of individual inmates' characteristics are almost entirely absent from research of prison riots. The current study sought to fill this void using official infraction records and prison dossiers of 831 male inmates selected from the southwestern USA. Logistic regression models indicated that inmates who were cited for criminal infractions, such as theft, possession of weapons or drugs, threatening staff, and social risk factors were significantly more likely to engage in prison rioting. In fact, the model which contained criminal career, demographic information, infraction, and other social risk factors explained 40% of the variation in prison rioting. Suggestions for research on prison riots that included inmates' criminal history and characteristics of infraction are offered.


Subject(s)
Career Choice , Crime/statistics & numerical data , Prisoners/psychology , Prisoners/statistics & numerical data , Riots/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Risk Factors
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