When it pays to be insane: three unusual legacies of insanity

R L Goldstein
1986 The Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law  
Although the law generally does not permit an individual to profit by his own wrongdoing, that equitable principle may be inapplicable in the case of an individual who has been adjudicated insane (and therefore has not committed a wrong in the eyes of the law). This paper discusses three unusual legacies of a determination of insanity: the inheritance cases (permitting the insane killer to inherit from his own victim), the life insurance cases (permitting the beneficiary to recover when the
more » ... red commits suicide while insane), and the effect of insanity on publication rights agreements in sensational criminal cases.
pmid:3768538 fatcat:zt66ottksvemtlrxuut5hdke4u