Durham rule
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The Durham Rule or "product test" was adopted by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1954, in the case of Durham vs. U.S. (214 F.2d 862 ), and states that "... an accused is not criminally responsible if his unlawful act was the product of mental disease or defect". Durham vs. U.S. was later overturned in the case U.S. vs. Brawner, 471 F.2d 969( 1972). After the 1970s, U.S. jurisdictions have tended to not recognize this argument as it places emphasis on "mental disease or defect" and thus on testimony by psychiatrists and is argued to be somewhat ambigious.
The "product test" was first articulated in the United States by New Hampshire State Supreme Court Chief Justice Charles Cogswell Doe, in State vs. Pike 1870.
The problem with the 'product test' was that it gave psychiatric and psychological experts too much influence in a decision of insanity and not enough to jurors. Expert witnesses are used in trials for the sole purpose of providing facts, not provide opinions. The product test asked expert witnesses to use their judgement in determining whether criminal actions were "'the product' of a mental disease or defect." It is the jury's job to decide whether a defendent's actions were the product of his actions. The expert witness' job is to determine whether the defendent possesses a mental disease or defect. Further, often times conflicting 'expert witnesses' were put on the witness stand by the prosecution and defense to draw the opposite conclusions regarding the cause of an individual's actions.