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Some remarks on the relation of Epilepsy and Crime

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

John Baker*
Affiliation:
H.M. Convict Prison, Portsmouth, Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum

Extract

The question of the relation of epilepsy and crime acquired considerable prominence in the early part of the present year in connection with the trial of “Regina v. Hitchins.”* The defendant in this trial, the epileptic lad, who fatally shot his sister at Weston-super-Mare, is now an inmate of Broadmoor Asylum. A short time after his admission three other male patients were received who were also the victims of epilepsy; they, too, had committed acts of homicide which had engrossed a considerable share of public attention.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1888 

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References

* “Lancet,” March 3rd, 1888.Google Scholar
* Readmissions excluded.Google Scholar
Includes female admissions from May, 1863, to February, 1864.Google Scholar
“Manual of Psychological Medicine” (Bucknill, and Tuke, ), p. 125.Google Scholar
§ “Reynolds' System of Medicine,” Vol. ii., p. 295, quoted by Clarke, Dr.Google Scholar
“Brain,” January, 1880, p. 492.Google Scholar
“Manual of Psychological Medicine” (Bucknill, and Tuke, ), p. 125.Google Scholar
** “Manual of Psychological Medicine” (Bucknill, and Tuke, ), p. 267.Google Scholar
* Alcoholic Epilepsy, “Journal of Mental Science,” Jan., 1881.Google Scholar
Ibid., p. 506.Google Scholar
Ibid., p. 509.Google Scholar
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