2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 6, 2000 NATION/WORLD DAMOUR Continued from Page IA telling him to kill the prime minister. This prompted a ruling that says individuals cannot be prosecuted for a crime if they are unable to tell right from wrong or if they don't know what they're doing. "The rule expanded and expanded, but now is very narrow," Damour said. "The fit of passion was added." The fit of passion clause involves crimes committed while in an altered state of mind due to a catalyst. One example is killing a spouse after walking in on them having an affair. "France is big into fit of passion," Damour said. "Hardly any judge will convict you if you shoot your lover for having an affair." In 1954, she said, the law was further expanded with the "product test" clause, which said the insanity plea could be used only if the crime is the product of illness. This law lasted only a year, as many attorneys tried to use the product test to explain that drunken driving was a product of alcoholism, Damour said. At this time, she said, it was also fairly easy to get off by insanity. "It was the prosecution's job to prove that the person was sane beyond a reasonable doubt," Damour said. "This is hard to prove." The law was changed in 1984, in the wake of John Hinkley's attempted assassination of President Reagan. Hinkley attempted to kill Reagan in 1981, mimick- ing the movie "Taxi Driver." "Hinkley was convinced that if he shot Ronald Rea- gan, Jodie Foster would fall in love with him," Damour said. "People-can't stand that he got off on the insanity plea because he had planned for months and under- stood the consequences." The new law was called the Insanity Defense Reform Law, which put the burden on the defense to prove the accused was insane. "The insanity plea is viewed as a way to get off," Damour said. "But in a jail term, once the term is served, you leave. In a mental institute, you can only leave if they decide you're safe." Defendants in only about 1 percent of cases use the insanity plea and only about a quarter of those get off, Damour said. "There's really been a lot of backlash because peo- ple are really skeptical," she said. "I think that we've seen the consequences in that the law has narrowed" "We came to the lecture because we thought it sounded really cool," LSA junior Mandy Viets said. "It was actually really good. It's cool how she didn't talk about just the history but looked at case studies." "She was really interesting, and she seems really nice," said Shipman member Lacie Kaiser, a Kinesiol- ogy sophomore. "It felt like she was talking to you one on one." ACROSS TH E AiO Bill to ban partial birth abortion passes WASHINGTON - House Republicans, defying the threat of another veto by President Clinton, for the third time in recent years pushed through legislation yesterday to prohibit certain forms of abortion - a key election-year issue for the GOPs conservative wing. Passage came on a heavily party-line vote of 287-141. Although the House vote achieved the two-thirds majority needed to override the anticipated veto, the Se9 count on a similar measure last October was 63-34 --not enough to override. The bill now goes to a joint House-Senate conference committee to reconcile differences between the two versions. Clinton has vetoed comparable measures twice, in 1996 and 1997, and earlier this week reiterated his intention to block the new bill. Passage of the abortion legislation has become virtually an annual rite since the GOP took control of Congress in 1995. The bill passed yesterday would prohibit medical procedures in which part of the fetus is pulled from the womb and into the birth canal before it is killed - a technique that opponents have branded a "partial-birth" abortion. Debate on the measure was intensely partisan - and emotional. House Republi- can leaders rushed the measure to the floor, bypassing the Judiciary Commit under rules that barred floor amendments - including a proposed Democra Tc alternative supported by some GOP moderates. Con ess lobbied for moratorium. gr Illinois Gov. George Ryan, who halt to executions rekindled a national debate over the death penalty in January when he halted WASHINGTON - Three men who executions until a commission could spent years in jail waiting to die for find out why more people were freed murders they didn't commit came to than lethally injected in his st , the Capitol yesterday to halt all U.S. released a statement praising Jacks executions until stronger safeguards can measure as a step toward "ensuring that ensure innocent people aren't executed. everyone accused of a crime is treated "You cannot bring a man back from fairly before the law." the grave after you find those errors," Darby Tillis said. He and co-defendant Probe into firearms Perry Cobb are among 13 innocent indusContinues men freed from Illinois' death row since 1987. Tillis, along with former Illinois HARTFORD, Conn. - Prosecutors death-row inmates Ronald Jones and in at least six states are investigating Gary Gauger, support an execution whether the gun industry is illegaV moratorium bill sponsored by Rep. trying to punish Smith & Wesson Jesse Jackson Jr.(D-l11.) agreeing to make its weapons more The legislation would immediately childproof. suspend all executions by the federal More than 20 subpoenas have been government and the states for seven issued for firearms manufacturers, years. To resume executions, states distributors and others, Connecticut would have to provide access to DNA Attorney General Richard Blumenthal testing to everyone on death row. said yesterday. The federal govern- Competing measures in the House ment is also looking at the issue, he and Senate also seek protections for said. A call to the Justice Department capital defendants but do not call for a was not immediately returned. AROUND THE WORLD New Japanese leader "This is an economy still very v- nerable to shock' said Russell Jones, to keep status quo chief economist with Lehman Bros. Japan. TOKYO -- Japan's tradition of The longer-term danger, howern, gradualism and its reluctance even dur- economists add, is that Japan's en- ing a major crisis to turn policy corners ing preference for the status quo will should benefit the world's second- further undercut reform and frustrate largest economy over the short-term early efforts to breathe new vitality into following the sudden loss of its prime this troubled nation. minister. Newly named Primed Mnier Turkish parliament Yoshiro Mori, tapped toledtecu- 1p rlim n try yesterday after his predecessor stops re-election Keizo Obuchi slipped into a stroke- induced coma three days earlier, has ANKARA, Turkey - Parliamo vowed to carry on where his predeces- voted yesterday against a proposal sorleft off. to keep President Suleyman "My biggest responsibility is to con- Demirel in office for another five tinue the Obuchi administration policy, years, setting off what is likely to especially the economic policy, which be a difficult search for a new can- he staked his life on," Mori said in a didate. speech yesterday. The decision was a serious blow to Economists say stepping into Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit's coali- Obuchi's shoes makes sense at a time tion government, which had pushed when Japan's troubled economy is just hard for re-electing the 76-year-old coming off life support and any rapid Demirel. His term ends May 16. shift could damage or even reverse hopes for a recovery. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. The Miiatgan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S, mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY: Arts 763-0379; Sports 647-3336: Opinion 764-055; Circulation 764-0558: Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: www.michigandaily.con. 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