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According to Ralph Slovenko, a professor of law and psychiatry at Wayne State University and an expert on the insanity defense, the insanity plea in Michigan requires proof of men- tal illness, and the existence of either a causal relationship between the illness and an act or proof that the illness af- fected cognition or control. "Therefore an individual who is cer- tifiably psychotic and has delusions about red Cadillacs could not be found not guilty by reason of insanity if he' stole a tractor. That's oversimplified, but you can see the (relationship) is not there," Slovenko said. Also, Michigan is one of the few states with a statutory definition of men- tal illness - the threshold question in any insanity defense. In Michigan, mental illness is defined as a significant, substantial impair- ment of mood or thought. Dr. Emanuel Tanay, a Detroit Foren- sic psychiatrist who testifies throughout the nation on insanity mat- ters, said most psychiatric experts in- terpret that statute to mean psychosis. Premeditation is, Tanay says, "of it- self no proof that the act was done with sound mind. Premeditation could be part of a plan or it could be the product of a delusion." Blunt testified towards premeditation and said he found no mental illness in Kelly. Birmingham psychiatrist Dr. Ed- ward Nol, however, testified that Kelly experienced just such delusions at the time of the crime and suffered a "psychotic break" when he pulled the trigger. Nol told jurors there was "no way" Kelly could have appreciated the wrongfulness of his actions during the shooting. "During the psychotic episode, we don't even recognize our- selves. We're a different person, a dif- ferent body we don't recognize." In a recent interview, Nol reiterated that Kelly was a paranoid schizophrenic, and said Kelly under- went a "suspension of operational judgement" when he shot Siwik and McGreaham.- "To commit such wanton destruction, one's state of mind cannot be normal. We all could kill, but to go through with his room after the shootings. Nol said Kelly's "planning" before the crime was all part of his delusions - of an enourmous fantasy world he built up. Nol-includes the list in that fantasy, though he said he had not been aware of its existence at the time of his examinations or testimony. "If it was indeed a list in his writing drafted before the shooting, I include it in the whole fantastic build up of cops and robbers - the macho image he cast himself in. "I do not think it could be taken for premeditation. If a man has an enour- mous gun collection, I think that's similar: He senses some lack in himself that he thinks the guns will make up for. If that man goes out and commits a violent act, I don't think the existence of the gun collection suggests premeditation." Nol says every act of murder is in- sane, though the actor need not be. "There is no question Kelly was in- sane," he says. Tanay, who twice examined Kelly at Waterman's request but was never called to testify, says Nol's theory about lack of judgement is inconsistent with a methodical planning of the crime. "You can't have a suspension of operational judgement, whatever that means, and then at the same time do something in preparation unless you say the person prepared this because of some chronic psychosis," he says. Tanay says he was not asked to testify because his reports indicated he had "no opinion" on Kelly's mental state, but added "that is how I put it in the report.. If you have no opinion and you're asked as an expert, that means your opinion is a negative opinion." "I found no evidence of any overt psychopathology," he said. Unlike Nol, Blunt characterized Kelly's memory loss as "pathological lying." "It might have been denial," Blunt says. "He was denying in the face of all evidence, but I think he could remem- ber. That is not amnesia; that is pathological lying to the pointtwhere you actually believe it." Harlan Stock, a clinical psychologist at the forensic center who joined Blunt in testifying for the prosecution, also said Kelly's memory loss was feigned. "The amnesia Kelly was talking about was convenient amnesia," Stock says. "He could have told us more than each used the idea to reach a different determination of his mental status. Kelly began at the University following a pre-medical curriculm but was dismissed from school for poor grades in 1980. After a year working in Texas, Kelly returned to the University in January, 1981 and declared a psychology major. Though his academic record was never made public, both prosecution and defense indicated Kelly's grades during his last term were rather poor. "Kelly's parents had big plans for him" Blunt says. "They were very nice people, and it was a real tragedy all the way around. They wanted him to be a doctor, but he was just a screw-up. "That's why I thought Siwik was an ideal candidate, an ideal victim: He 'To commit such wanton de state of mind cannot be norn psychia trist Water selection move tt County. Court Ji the moti Waterr "Judge paucity was con viously r it." Water: be handl Lumumi jury sel people i Leo Kell Lumui strategy 'He meant to take out as many people as possible, perhaps all, and escape.' -Dr. Lynn Blunt, psychiatrist for the prosecution represented exactly what was angering him, bringing out Kelly's sense of failure and frustration. "I saw the conflict being between success and non-success. Don't get the idea I'm saying he just meant to take out Ed Siwik, though. He meant to take out as many people as possible, perhaps all, and escape." Nol combined Kelly's frustration with the system of delusion he said Kelly had built. "Leo Kelly was engaged in an argument with himself over his feeling of failure," Nol says. "If we look at Kelly and carry that metaphor through, it's obvious he had been losing the argument for a long time." Nol also said racial tension at the University exacerbated Kelly's frustration and made him especially susceptible to psychosis. Racial division of another sort plagued the trial and, Waterman con- tends, constitutes grounds for appeal. Blacks accounted for only 4 percent of the original pool of jurors even though Wastenaw County's black population is considerably larger than 4 percent. These few black jurors were easily disqualified by the prosecution's use of . peremptory challenges - dismissing jurors without having to show cause. Mackie and Noah insisted they were not excluding jurors based on race, but in the end the jury ended up all-white;. several black jurors were removed peremptorily by the prosecution. As a basis for appeal the use or abuse of peremptory challenges is probably not viable: High courts have upheld the peremptory challenge in the past. In the Kelly case, the defense was allowed 20 peremptory challenges to the prosecution's 15. Waterman says the jury selection process itself is discriminatory because it relies on voter, registration to form the jury pool. Since blacks do not vote in representative numbers, he says, get- ting even one black juror is impossible given the peremptory right. Not only the selection, but the final jury angered Waterman because it was conspicuously white. "The jury will be asked to focus on the history and at- titudes and reactions of a black defen- dant, and it is almost impossible for people who have never lived under that circumstance to evaluate the state of mind of an individual who has," Waterman says. jury sele the insar trial, ant allegedly strong p briefs nev Watern a polygri violation law." Thepo the foren Blunt, bo to take it. In a st cing, Kel taking th test were and beca of the pa the matte Regarc Waterma a meetinE He said be taken decision another a "It wa Waterma forget." Watern everyone and the tr Scott ar Douglas both said pened " families least two dropped friends a handle th It is te Bursley l people sh happened But fro tor, the isolated t "It's r yourself, become remembe of my lif4 great tin others or tragedy, funny, Le of what h Adams He cove Daily in j ,4 . the act requires a suspension of judgment," Nol says. Nol also told jurors that Kelly's ap- parent loss of memory about the events surrounding the trial was an act of psychiatric denial - a mental defense mechanism to prevent the recall of thoughts that are too threatening. "Leo Kelly was clearly delusional," Nol says. "The incident occurred after he had read considerably and heard a great deal about terrorist acts throughout the world. His social history indicates a great deal of stress - relationship stress particularly - which is what we find at the base of most terrorist activities." Testimony showed that before the shooting, Kelly bought shells for the 12- gauge shotgun he used in the slayings, gasoline for the Molotov cocktails, and a gas mask, all of which police found in he did." Stock disagreed with Blunt, however, that Kelly targeted any particular vic- tim. Instead, he said, the victims were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. Though Nol says many people have fantasies and make elaborate plans to carry them out - but don't act - Stock says this condition is not particularly common. "At least I hope not," he says. "Someone can plan a murder carefully and still be insane. The dif- ference is when the murder was the result of a crazy idea." Tanay says the "hallmark of being mentally well" is not acting on one's fantasies. "Though not having the ability to fantasize would be sick." The psychiatric experts invariably mentioned Kelly's frustration and failure as a University student, though r9 C £ ~ a'Yjf4LI I .KN[e 1#'1 O3