On the morning of October 8, 1974 Gary Najeeb Solomon was driving to New Orleans Academy to attend classes. When an unmarked car behind him began to flash a blue dashboard light, he pulled his car to the side of the road, thinking that the driver of the other ve-’ hide was a policeman. Appellant Thomas L. Phillips then approached Solomon, searched his car and purported to arrest him after finding a marihuana-like substance in the vehicle. Phillips kept Solomon in his custody until FBI agents arrested him on the afternoon of October 9, 1974, approximately thirty-two hours after the abduction. Late on the afternoon of October 8, 1974, Phillips called Solomon’s father in Atlanta, Georgia demanding $1,500,000 ransom. The government prosecuted Phillips under 18 U.S.C. Section 875(a) for making that interstate ransom demand. After a jury adjudged him sane at the time of the offense and guilty, the trial judge sentenced him to twenty years imprisonment. Phillips now challenges his conviction charging that the evidence does not support the jury’s finding that he was sane at the time of the offense, and that the trial judge committed reversible error in refusing to allow Phillips’ counsel to testify. We affirm.
Though the government must prove the sanity of the accused, a criminal defendant is initially presumed sane. Where no evidence of insanity is introduced, the presumption suffices to carry the government’s burden.
Mims v. United States,
In Blake v. United States, supra, the en banc court expressly adopted the ALI definition of criminal responsibility for use in defining insanity.
“(1) A person is not responsible for criminal conduct if at the time of such conduct as a result of mental disease or defect he lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law.
“(2) As used in this Article, the terms ‘mental disease or defect’ do not include an abnormality manifested only by repeated criminal or otherwise antisocial conduct.”
The jury heard extensive testimony on the question of Phillips’ sanity. Both sides presented expert witnesses, and laypersons testified to Phillips’ actions before, at, and after the time of the offense. The experts agreed that Phillips suffered from some type of personality disorder, but did not feel that he suffered from any major mental illness such as schizophrenia or manic psychosis. Dr. Galese, the expert that the defense called, testified that Philips had the po-' tential for transient psychotic episodes and that it was possible that Phillips was suffering from such an episode at the time of the offense. But both Dr. Ga-lese and Dr. Usdin, the expert called by the government, expressed the opinion that Phillips was not in the midst of any transient psychotic episode at the time of the offense. Gary Solomon testified extensively about Phillips’ actions during the kidnapping episode. Other lay witnesses testified about Phillips’ conduct at various times before and after the ab-' duction.
The lay testimony about Phillips’ penchant for unusual behavior, and the expert testimony about the possibility of transient psychotic episodes was clearly ■ sufficient to eliminate the presumption of sanity and require the government to demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that Phillips was sane when he made the interstate ransom demand.
See United States v. Bass, supra.
But the expert opinion that Phillips was not in the midst of a transient psychotic episode at the time of the offense, and the extensive lay testimony, particularly that of Gary Solomon, about Phillips’ actions at the time of the offense, created sufficient evidence of sanity to go to the jury.
See Blake v. United States, supra
at 911;
Nagell v. United States,
Phillips also challenges the trial court’s refusal to allow his attorney to testify that Phillips phoned him and claimed to be a person named “Louise.” The trial judge has discretion to allow an attorney for a party to testify at trial.
United States v. Crockett,
Affirmed.
