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DOES PSYCHIATRIC DISORDER PREDICT VIOLENT CRIME AMONG RELEASED JAIL DETAINEES? A SIX-YEAR LONGITUDINAL STUDY

NCJ Number
145727
Author(s)
L A Teplin; K M Abram; G M McClelland
Date Published
1993
Length
32 pages
Annotation
This paper examines whether or not detainees with severe mental disorders (schizophrenia and major affective disorders), substance use disorders (alcohol and drug), or psychotic symptoms (hallucinations and delusions) are arrested more often for violent crimes than detainees with no disorders.
Abstract
The postrelease period examined in the study was 6 years. Trained interviewers obtained DSM-III diagnoses on 728 randomly selected male jail detainees, using the National Institute of Mental Health Diagnostic Interview Schedule. Researchers obtained followup arrest data for 6 years. Neither severe mental disorder nor substance abuse/dependence predicted the probability of arrest or the number of arrests for violent crime. Persons with symptoms of both hallucinations and delusions had a slightly higher number of arrests for violent crime, but not to the point of significance. The findings were consistent after controlling for prior violence and age. Overall, findings do not suport the stereotype that mentally ill criminals invariably commit violent crimes after they are released. Future research directions are suggested. 73 references and 3 tables