In a dramatic twist, defendant Marco Mangione has withdrawn his psychiatric defence in the high-profile murder trial that has gripped the United States. The reversal, announced in a New York courtroom on Tuesday, means the trial will now proceed without the key argument that Mangione was not criminally responsible due to mental illness. UK legal experts have questioned the integrity of the US justice system, pointing to disparities in legal aid, jury selection, and the prevalence of plea bargaining as fundamental flaws.
Mangione, 34, is accused of murdering two people in a Manhattan apartment in 2021. His initial defence hinged on claims of paranoid schizophrenia, supported by medical records and expert testimony. However, without explanation, his legal team withdrew the plea, leaving observers baffled. The judge has now scheduled a full jury trial, expected to last six weeks.
Professor David Harris, a criminal law specialist at the University of Cambridge, said the move was unusual but not unheard of in the American system. “In the UK, a defendant changing their plea so dramatically would likely face a thorough inquiry into their mental capacity,” he said. “But in the US, the focus is often on the adversarial process, and defendants can shift strategy without the same safeguards.”
The case has reignited debates about the differences between UK and US legal approaches. In Britain, the insanity defence is codified in the M’Naghten Rules, which require a defendant to prove they did not understand the nature of their act. In the US, standards vary by state, but many allow for a broader definition of diminished responsibility. Yet access to psychiatric experts is frequently a privilege of the wealthy. Mangione, who had been receiving free legal aid, may have faced difficulties funding a psychiatric defence.
The reversal also highlights the role of plea negotiations. In the US, over 90% of criminal cases end in a plea deal, often trading a reduced sentence for a guilty plea. Critics argue this pressures defendants to abandon potentially valid defences. “The Mangione case is a textbook example of how the system can fail,” said Amara Okonkwo, a legal scholar at the London School of Economics. “A defendant with serious mental health issues should not be coerced into changing their plea without adequate support.”
Meanwhile, the families of the victims have expressed relief at the trial’s progress. “We just want justice,” said Maria Gonzalez, whose son was killed in the attack. “But we also want to know why he changed his story.”
The trial is set to begin in July. For now, the case serves as a stark reminder of the gulf between two legal systems that both claim to deliver justice, yet often leave the most vulnerable behind.








