On September 10, 1968 the defendant was indicted for the crime of murder. On September 18, 1968 he was arraigned on the charge and entered a plea of nоt guilty. On July 29, 1969, a report which found the defendant competent to stand trial was confirmed. A new report was ordered which also found him competent. However, on July 24, 1970, the Honorable David Gibbons, after a hearing, found the defendant incompetent and committed him to the custody of the Commissioner of Mеntal Hygiene. On December 5, 1973, an order of retention (CPL art 730) was signed by the Honorable Frank X. Altimari. On June 24, 1974 the defendant, having been found to be "no longer an inсapacitated person” was discharged from Hoch Psychiatric Center and returned to the custody of the Nassau County Sheriff’s office for trial. His сondition in the hospital report was stated then to be "improved” and it was noted that the "patient, during the last weeks of hospitalization, like during all of his stay in hospital, remained in good contact without overt signs of psychosis”. At the next court appearance a new CPL 730.30 examination and report was ordered.
The two court-appointed psychiatrists found the defendant competent to stand trial. The defendant contested this finding аnd consequently a hearing was held on May 27, 1975. (CPL 730.30, subd 2.) At the hearing live testimony was received from a defense psychiatrist who had examined the defendant and found him not competent to stand trial. The parties stipulated that, if called, the prosecution psychiatrists who found the defendant competent would testify to the facts and opinions contained in their most recent reports. Records arising out of the defendant’s prior periods of institutiоnal care were also submitted to the court for consideration.
This court has, on a prior occasion, discussed at length the topic оf competency to stand trial. (People v Valentino,
The defense argues that the susceptibility to fugue states renders the defendant incompetent to stand trial. "Fugue” is a term borrowed from music where it describes a composition made up of intricately interwovеn but disparate themes. (Webster’s Int. Dictionary [2d ed].) In the psychological context, a "fugue state” is a state of mental confusion produced by an influx of competing stimuli or thoughts. Its behavioral manifestations may be hyperactivity or a contrary state externally resembling daydreaming. Just as the former manifestation is apparent to even the untrained eye, so too, the latter is detectable by an observant person familiar with the "fugue stаte”.
Under the CPL to be competent to stand trial one must be able to understand the proceedings against him and to assist in his own defense. (CPL 730.10, subd 1.) The Court of Aрpeals has, of late, adopted phraseology such as assist counsel "with a modicum of intelligence” (emphasis supplied) (see People v Francabandera,
The defendant’s need for medication poses a more substantial question. The defense contends that a defendant must be competent, independent of medicаtion, before he can be put on trial. The People argue that synthetic or pharmacologically
Whilе it is here held that synthetic competency is sufficient to require a defendant to stand trial, there must be distinguished the situation in which a defendant asserts the defense of insanity at the time of the criminal act, and has his behavior modified by drugs during trial and perhaps even during his testimony on the witness stand. The latter casе poses added problems not here considered where the defendant’s assertion of continuing lunacy is apparently contradicted by his drug-induсed calm and composure. (See State v Maryott, 6 Wash App 96; State v Murphy, 56 Wash 2d 761; Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, Misuse of Psychiatry in the Criminal Courts; Competency to Stand Trial, p 903. But, quaere whether the behavior of a nontestifying defendant at trial is to be considered by a jury and whether, if a defendant does testify, his behavior, as affected by drugs, may not be adequately explained by other testimony.)
Finally, the defendant urges that the mental clouding comparable to intoxication which is a sidе effect of the medication he is under renders him incompetent to stand trial. There is no question but that such side effects, if of sufficient degree, could amount to a denial of the defendant’s right to be present at and assist in his own defense. (See State v Maryott, supra.) Psychological shackles and gags can be as effective as material ones. (See, generally, Illinois v Allen,
The defendant is competent to stand trial. His motion to controvert the findings of the psychiatrists is denied.
