enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Edme Castaing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edme_Castaing

    Castaing was taken to Paris, where an investigation commenced that lasted five months. For the first three days Castaing feigned insanity but soon gave it up. He was then moved to Versailles prison. [3] His trial commenced before the Paris Assize Court on November 10, 1823, and lasted eight days. [3]

  3. Feigned madness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feigned_madness

    "Feigned madness" is a phrase used in popular culture to describe the assumption of a mental disorder for the purposes of evasion, deceit or the diversion of suspicion. In some cases, feigned madness may be a strategy—in the case of court jesters , an institutionalised one—by which a person acquires a privilege to violate taboos on speaking ...

  4. Joseph Danks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Danks

    He feigned insanity, claiming that voices of divine origin had ordered him to kill the man, but this claim was not believed, and he was charged with first-degree murder. While awaiting trial, he remained in the Institution, where he continued to commit crimes: on November 12, 1991, a correctional officer searched through his cell and found a ...

  5. Malingering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malingering

    Odysseus was said to have feigned insanity to avoid participating in the Trojan War. [10] [11] Malingering was recorded in Roman times by the physician Galen, who reported two cases: one patient simulated colic to avoid a public meeting, and another feigned an injured knee to avoid accompanying his master on a long journey. [12]

  6. Insanity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insanity

    Amongst other purposes, insanity is feigned in order to avoid or lessen the consequences of a confrontation or conviction for an alleged crime. A number of treatises on medical jurisprudence were written during the nineteenth century, the most famous of which was Isaac Ray in 1838 (fifth edition 1871); others include Ryan (1832), Taylor (1845 ...

  7. Ten Days in a Mad-House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten_Days_in_a_Mad-House

    The question in hand was how Nellie managed to convince professionals of her insanity in the first place. As revealed in her first hand account, Ten Days in a Mad-House, Nellie spoke of how the main physician that performed her examination was more focused on the attractive nurse that was assisting the examination than with Nellie herself. [8]

  8. Joseph Massino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Massino

    Joseph Massino was born on January 10, 1943, in New York City. [1] He was one of three sons of Neapolitan-American Anthony and Adeline Massino. [2] Raised in Maspeth, Queens, [2] Massino has admitted to being a juvenile delinquent by the age of 12 and claimed that at 14 he ran away from home to Florida. [3]

  9. Hans Schmidt (priest) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans_Schmidt_(priest)

    In December 1914, Schmidt admitted that he feigned insanity during his trials. In admitting so, however, he accused Ernest Muret, the dentist with whom he'd had a homosexual affair, of having accidentally killed Anna during a botched abortion.