In a move that would make Cicero weep into his toga, Luigi Mangione’s legal team has abruptly abandoned the psychiatric defence in his state murder trial. The about-face, announced yesterday in a New York court, has sent tremors through the British legal establishment, where barristers watch with a mixture of fascination and horror. One cannot help but see this as yet another symptom of the intellectual rot infecting modern jurisprudence.
Mangione, charged with the brutal killing of a rival mafia boss in 2023, initially pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. His lawyers painted a portrait of a man unhinged, a puppet of paranoid delusions. Now, they have torn up that script, opting instead for a straight denial of guilt.
Why? Because psychiatric defences, once the darling of progressive courts, have become a liability. Juries are tired of the ‘mad or bad’ binary, tired of experts duelling over DSM-5 criteria like medieval scholastics debating angels on pinheads.
The Mangione reversal is a stark admission that such defences rarely work today. In Britain, where the insanity defence has been all but neutered by the Criminal Procedure (Insanity and Unfitness to Plead) Act 1991, this comes as no surprise. But the implications go deeper.
By jettisoning the psychiatric plea, Mangione’s team has tacitly acknowledged that mental illness is now a stigma, not an excuse. Is this the triumph of moral accountability? Hardly.
It is the triumph of a culture that has lost faith in both redemption and reason. The Victorians, who built asylums with the fervour of cathedral builders, would be appalled. Yet here we are: Mangione, a man who allegedly planned the murder with cold calculation, now risks a life sentence because his lawyers fear the jury will see psychiatric claims as a lawyer’s trick.
This is not justice. This is a debasement of legal thought, a retreat from nuance into brute force. British legal experts, who have long admired American trial theatre, should look away.
Or better yet, they should take notes on how not to run a justice system. Mangione’s trial, scheduled for September, will now hinge on forensic evidence and witness testimony. The psychiatrists have been sent home.
The intellectual debate is dead. Let us hope that somewhere in the ruins of this legal folly, a shred of wisdom remains. But I would not bet my wig on it.









