U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Mentally Handicapped Offender (Probation/Parole)

NCJ Number
91549
Author(s)
G McDonald
Date Published
1978
Length
0 pages
Annotation
This film offers police officers instruction on how to distinguish mental retardation from mental disturbance in persons coming to their attention for disorderly or otherwise suspect behavior.
Abstract
About 12 percent of the population are mentally retarded; 25 percent have some degree of mental disturbance, including 1 percent who are severely disturbed. While the mentally retarded, due to the characteristics of their handicap, are easily caught and are often behind bars, the mentally disturbed harbor potential dangers to themselves and society that may erupt without forewarning. Since the two have totally different causes for their behavior and different treatment needs, it is vital that police officers be able to distinguish between them and provide understanding and appropriate services. The retarded have developmentally limited learning processes in gradations from mild and moderate to severe and profound retardation. Their behavior is often childlike, their muscular coordination undeveloped, their speech slurred, and their information and understanding limited. They may, however, become belligerent if mistreated. Contrary to popular opinion, mentally retarded persons do not become mentally disturbed. The latter disorder arises from emotional stress of intense degree and duration and culminates in a moment of crisis, characterized by distortions of thought, perception, mood, and physical behavior. A series of vignettes illustrate typical behaviors of both mentally retarded and mentally disturbed behavior in public places -- (store, library, street, probation office). Officers are urged to consider what type of handicap is being portrayed and what the officer's response should be.

Downloads

No download available

Availability