Wе consider here the effect of a defendant’s voluntary intoxication and drug use on his insanity defense under the Insanity Defense Reform Act, 18 U.S.C. § 17.
BACKGROUND
Robert Gerald Knott and his accomplice Jeffrey Frost indulged in a nine-day crime spree that included several kidnappings.
Prior to thе kidnappings that are the subject of this case, the pair kidnapped an elderly couple in Nevada, stole the proceeds of their travelers checks, and left them bound and gagged in a motel. Next they kidnapped an elderly man in Oregon, stole his truck, and аbandoned him in a forest.
Knott and Frost then proceeded to another town in Oregon where they abducted the husband, wife, and child whose kidnapping we address. They rented a room from the couple and waited for the husband to leave the motel. They then confrontеd the wife with a gun, stole from the cash box, and forced her and her infant daughter to accompany them to her living quarters. When the husband arrived he was greeted at gunpoint and told the family would be shot if he did not cooperate.
The next day the kidnappers took the hostages to a nearby city and forced them to withdraw money from their bank account. After Knott checked into a motel and learned that he and Frost were wanted by the police, Knott decided to keep the family as hostages. During the several days that they held thе couple hostage, Knott repeatedly raped the wife.
Eventually the kidnappers took the family into Washington and abandoned the husband in a remote wooded area. When they later saw a patrol car they panicked, stopped their van, and flеd on foot. The wife and daughter escaped during this confusion.
The crime spree ended the following day, when Knott and Frost took yet more hostages. One hostage and Frost were killed during an ensuing shootout with the police.
Knott was indicted on one count of conspiracy to kidnap and three counts of kidnapping in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1201(a) and (c). In support of his insanity defense, he introduced evidence that he acted irrationally toward his kidnapping victims. He played “Russian roulette” with the couple and with himself. Once he broke down and сried, claiming he wanted only to give up, then stopped and resolved that he was a “warrior” and would die fighting. There was testimony that he drank on several occasions before and during the time he held the family hostage, and snorted and ate an unidentified “white powder.”
He timеly appeals his conviction following a guilty verdict. We affirm.
DISCUSSION
Knott argues that the district court erred in refusing to give a proffered instruction on the effect of voluntary intoxication on an insanity defense. He contends also that the court’s insanity defense instruction misstated the law.
A. Knott’s Proposed Instruction
Knott contends that his drinking and drug use in combination with his schizophrenia caused him to be insane when he kidnapped the family.
1
He argues that the
This circuit has announced varied approaches to the proper standard of review of a district court’s refusal to instruct on a criminal defendant’s theory of the case.
See United States v. Sotelo-Murillo,
Here, as in
Sotelo-Murillo,
we need not resolve the question of the proper standard of review. A defendant is entitled to an instruction on his theory of the case if it is supported by law and has some foundation in the evidence.
United States v. Lesina,
The Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984 (the Act) governs an insanity defense to a federal crime. 18 U.S.C. § 17. Under that Act, the defendant has the burden of establishing the defense by clear and cоnvincing evidence, § 17(b), and must meet the statute’s two-prong test. First, he must establish that he suffered from a serious mental disease or defect at the time of the crime. § 17(a). Second, his mental disease or defect must have prevented him from appreciating the nature and quаlity or wrongfulness of his acts. § 17(a);
United States v. F.D.L.,
Here, Knott has the burden of establishing that he was insane when he kidnapped the family. The parties agree that his schizophrenia is a serious mental disease that satisfies the first prong of the test.
However, in this instance, his mental condition alonе is insufficient to satisfy the second prong of the test. To satisfy it, he must show that as a result of his mental disease he was unable to appreciate the nature and quality of his acts. § 17(a). He does not maintain that his schizophrenia per se satisfies the second prong. Nor dоes he argue that his involuntary intoxication satisfies it. 3
Instead, he contends that the combination of his schizophrenia and his voluntary use of intoxicants met the second prong of the test. We disagree.
Although the issue we address here is not the validity of an insanity defense based оn voluntary intoxication alone, we are instructed by Congress’s statements about voluntary intoxication. Prior to the Act, a majority of courts followed the rule that the mental effects of voluntary intoxication did not excuse responsibility for a criminal act.
Springer v. Collins,
When we combine Congress’s statements about voluntary intoxication with its clear intent to narrow the common law definition of insanity, id. at 222, we are persuaded that voluntary intoxication combined with a mental disease will not support an insanity defense under the Act. To agree with Knott’s contentiоn would broaden the defense, contrary to this legislative intent.
We are further persuaded by a principle that runs throughout the insanity defense, from its origin in
M’Naghten’s Case,
10 Cl. & F. 200, 8 Eng. Rep. 718 (1843), through its American Law Institute evolution. A mental disease or defect must be beyond the control of the defendant if it is to vitiаte his responsibility for the crime committed.
See United States v. Henderson,
Although neither the statute nor its history directly addresses this combination argument, this circuit has considered it. In
United States v. Burnim,
we determined that when considering an insanity defеnse, the court must “disregard whatever incapacitating effects were attributable to the voluntary ingestion of alcohol.”
However, Burnim’s insanity was due not to the organic brain defect alone, but to the combination of the defect and his voluntary intoxication.
Id.
Thus, his insanity wаs not caused by factors beyond his control and he was not entitled to the defense.
Id.
at 237-38;
see also Kane,
Knott’s argument places him in an identical position to the defendants in Kane and Burnim. Voluntary intoxication may not be considered in determining an insanity defense. To allow it under the Act when common law precluded it would broaden rather thаn narrow the insanity defense. We refuse to do this.
Knott argues that
United States v. Henderson,
Only one case in this circuit gives a hint of support to Knott’s theоry.
United States v. Hartfield,
We understand
Hartfield
to apply only to involuntary intoxication for there was no evidence that Hartfield voluntarily used drugs or alcohol. Reading the cаse as Knott suggests would allow an insanity defense based on voluntary intoxication. Such a result would be an aberration of insanity defense law in this and other circuits.
See Burnim,
We hold that under the Insanity Defense Reform Act, the defendant’s voluntary drug use or intoxication at the time of the crime may not be considered in combination with his mental disease or defect in determining whether the defendant was unable to appreciate the nature and quality or wrongfulness of his acts.
Because we conclude that the law does not support Knott’s theory of the case, we do not reach the question whether it has some foundation in the evidence.
B. The Court’s Instructions
We read jury instructions as a wholе to determine their adequacy,
United States v. Burgess,
Following the rule in Burnim, the court here correctly instructed the jury:
The effects of the voluntary use of drugs or alcohol do not constitute, nor may they legally give rise to a severe mental disease or defect. The voluntary use of drugs or alcohol also must be disregarded in determining whether the defendant could appreciate the nature and quality of his acts or the moral wrongfulness of his acts. However, if you find that at the time in issue the defendant had a severe mental disease or defect and that the disease or dеfect gave rise to an inability to appreciate the nature or quality or moral wrongfulness of his acts, then the defendant’s subsequent consumption of drugs or alcohol, whether voluntary or involuntary, cannot preclude his defense of insanity.
Knott complains that the lаst sentence of that instruction deprived him of his insanity defense. He contends that the negative inference of the last sentence was that any intoxication prior to the crime precluded his defense. He argues that the jury mistakenly could have determined that, although he was insane due solely to his schizоphrenia, his drinking prior to the kidnapping prevented him from establishing an insanity defense.
A plain reading of the instruction does not support his theory. The instruction provides essentially that if a defendant claims he became insane because he voluntarily ingested alcоhol, the defense is not available to him. On the other hand, if he is already insane and drinks alcohol, the defense is not taken from him. Read in context, the last sentence was plainly ameliorative of Knott’s subsequent behavior, and assured that the jury would not strip him of his defense simрly because it found that he became intoxicated at some point. The court’s instructions adequately stated the law.
See Burnim,
AFFIRMED. We vacate sua sponte the special assessment.
See Shah v. United States,
Notes
. Knott did not argue to us that he lacked specific intent to kidnap the family. In fact, he specifically informed the court that he eschewed that argument. Nor did he make that argument
. Knott’s proposed "Substance Abuse/Insanity” instruction read:
You may consider the defendant’s voluntary substance abuse in combination with defendant’s mental disease in detеrmining whether or not the defendant was unable to appreciate the nature and quality of his acts or was unable to appreciate the wrongfulness of his acts. Substance abuse or voluntary intoxication is one factor in throwing light upon the mental condition of thе accused at the time of the alleged offense. You may find that the defendant was insane at the time of the alleged conduct as a result of his severe mental disease in combination with his substance abuse or voluntary intoxication.
. We need not consider the еffect of involuntary intoxication on the insanity defense. There was no evidence of involuntary intoxication and Knott did not request an instruction to that effect.
See Kane v. United States,
.
Henderson
was decided prior to the federal statute. Under the law at that time, if the defendant raised an insanity defensе, the government had to prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt.
. Knott also relies on a second circuit case,
United States v. Torniero,
