Daubert Standard, (Admissibility of Psychological Evidence & Expert Witness Testimony)

Daubert Standard, (Admissibility of Psychological Evidence & Expert Witness Testimony)

"admissibility  of  evidence  on  psychiatric  issues  is  infrequently  challenged, unless the material presented is novel or peripheral to mainstream understanding of diagnosis, prognosis, or treatment intervention" (Roberts  1996 ; Gutheil & Sutherland  1999 ; Slobogin  1999 ; Slobogin et al.  2001...)Roberts, Paul. "Will you stand up in court? On the admissibility of psychiatric and psychological evidence." Journal of Forensic Psychiatry 7.1 (1996): 63-78.Dahl, Peter R. "Legal and psychiatric concepts and the use of psychiatric evidence in criminal trials." Calif. L. Rev. 73 (1985): 411.Buchanan, Alec, and Michael A. Norko, eds. "The psychiatric report: Principles and practice of forensic writing, Writing for the US federal courts" Cambridge University Press, 2011, p. 3Biggers, Jacquelyne R. "The utility of diagnostic language as expert witness testimony: Should syndrome terminology be used in battering cases?." Journal of forensic psychology practice 5.1 (2005): 43-61.   Dahir, Veronica B., et al. "Judicial Application of Daubert to Psychological Syndrome and Profile Evidence: A Research Note." Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 11.1 (2005): 62.Amato, Julie M., and Ira K. Packer. "Battered-Child Syndrome." Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online 34.3 (2006): 414-416.    {Admissibility of Expert Testimony on “Syndrome Evidence” Properly Determined Through Application of Minnesota Rule of Evidence 702, Not the Frye-Mack Standard, State v. MacLennan (702 N.W.2d 219 (Minn. 2005))}    Grove, William M., and R. Christopher Barden. "Protecting the integrity of the legal system: The admissibility of testimony from mental health experts under Daubert/Kumho analyses." Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 5.1 (1999): 224.           Gutheil, Thomas G., and Marshall D. Stein. "Daubert-based gatekeeping and psychiatric/psychological testimony in court: Review and proposal." J. Psychiatry & L. 28 (2000): 235.https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/jpsych28&div=20&id=&page=         Slobogin, Christopher. "The admissibility of behavioral science information in criminal trials: From primitivism to Daubert to voice." Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 5.1 (1999): 100.Slobogin, Christopher. "Psychiatric evidence in criminal trials: A 25-year retrospective." (2001). The Evolution of Mental Health Law .   Washington,  DC :   American Psychological Association , pp. 245–276.https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2001-01474-013Monden, Yasuhiro, Richard Rosner, Principles and Practice of Forensic Psychiatry, 2003DOI https://doi.org/10.1201/b13499Smith, S. (1989). Mental health expert witnesses: Of science and crystal balls.BehavioralSciences & the Law, 7(2), 145–180.Yuille, J. (1989). Expert evidence by psychologists: Sometimes problematic and often premature.Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 7(2), 181–196.McCormick, M. (1982). Scientific evidence: Defining a new approach to admissibility. Iowa Law Review, 67(5), 879–916.{DOJ: https://www.ojp.gov/ncjrs/virtual-library/abstracts/scientific-evidence-defining-new-approach-admissibility}Huber, G. A., Roth, L. H., Appelbaum, P. S., & Ore, T. M. (1982). Hospitalization, Arrest, or Discharge: Important Legal and Clinical Issues in the Emergency Evaluation of Persons Believed Dangerous to Others. Law and Contemporary Problems, 45(3), 99. doi:10.2307/1191244 ----McEvoy, Joseph P., et al. "Why must some schizophrenic patients be involuntarily committed? The role of insight." Comprehensive psychiatry 30.1 (1989): 13-17.Appelbaum, Paul S. "A theory of ethics for forensic psychiatry." Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online 25.3 (1997): 233-247.Gutheil, Thomas G., and Pamela K. Sutherland. "Forensic assessment, witness credibility and the search for truth through expert testimony in the courtroom." The Journal of Psychiatry & Law 27.2 (1999): 289-312.Johnson, Sally, Eric Elbogen, and Alyson Kuroski-Mazzei. "Writing for the US Federal Courts." Principles and Practice of Forensic Psychiatry, edited by Michael A. Norko and Alec Buchanan, CRC Press, 2017, pp. 63-72.Gold, Liza H., and Richard L. Frierson, eds. The American Psychiatric Publishing textbook of forensic psychiatry. American Psychiatric Pub, 2017.----Veteran's Rights:            Did you know that 'PTSD' is the only Non-Kraepelian [non-endogenous,] diagnosis in the DSM?        {There is no specific category for catastrophic ego-fragmentation, or other sequelae related to Torture.}        Despite Harlow 1957, eg. Documenting in great detail as a medical disorder symptoms related to American POW's.        All DSM categories, even those which may be related to POW/Torture/Interrogation, are categorized as endogenous (pre-existing,) conditions, with no understood etiology.        It's an insurance company scam / trick.. . . .Or according to the official US Government statement 'A mystery to science!'According to APA, PTSD itself isn't a disabling condition; unless it's co-accompanied by other (pre-existing,) illness.Which means, no one has to pay a penny, for Veterans or others; suffering.{APA is also reluctant to diagnose PTSD in persons who are not US Government employees.}--Lykaion Publishing, 2022.----Also see:"Thank You For Your Service," Dreamworks Pictures, (et al.) 2017.DRRI-2 [Stress Modeling / Stress Adaptation / (Human Factors)]
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