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  2. M'Naghten rules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M'Naghten_rules

    The M'Naghten rules are at the focus of John Grisham's legal thriller A Time to Kill. The M'Naghten rules apply in the US State of Mississippi , where the plot is set, and using them is the only way for the lawyer protagonist to save his client.

  3. Daniel M'Naghten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_M'Naghten

    M'Naghten's defence had successfully argued that he was not legally responsible for an act that arose from a delusion; the rules represented a step backwards to the traditional 'knowing right from wrong' test of criminal insanity. Had the rules been applied in M'Naghten's own case, the verdict might have been different. [6]

  4. Edward Drummond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Drummond

    Edward Drummond (30 March 1792 – 25 January 1843) was a British civil servant, and was Personal Secretary to several British prime ministers.He was fatally shot by Daniel M'Naghten, whose subsequent trial gave rise to the M'Naghten rules, the legal test of insanity used in many common law jurisdictions.

  5. Kahler v. Kansas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kahler_v._Kansas

    The insanity defense is a traditional affirmative defense that dates at least back to English common law.The codification of the M'Naghten rules, which have been referenced in one form or another in US law as well as UK law, indicates that someone may be found not guilty of a crime because of a mental condition which prevents them from either controlling their actions or from knowing whether ...

  6. Excuse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excuse

    Insanity defense, mental disorder defences and the M'Naghten Rules If individuals are a danger to society and/or to themselves but not responsible through a lack of understanding, there is no point in punishment (whether in the criminal or non-criminal sense).

  7. Royal Commission on Capital Punishment 1949–1953 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Commission_on_Capital...

    [5]: 632–3 It responded to the M'Naghten rule that a person is legally insane if a mental disease prevents their knowledge of the nature or quality of their criminal act or that the act is wrong, and irresistible impulse rules that mental disease caused a lack of volitional control even if defendant knew the nature and quality of her act and ...

  8. Book excerpt: "Source Code: My Beginnings" by Bill Gates - AOL

    www.aol.com/book-excerpt-source-code-beginnings...

    Just four years old at the time, the "Beginners' All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code" was made to help students in nontechnical fields get started with computer programming.

  9. Insanity defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insanity_defense

    The M'Naghten Rules of 1843 were not a codification or definition of insanity but rather the responses of a panel of judges to hypothetical questions posed by Parliament in the wake of Daniel M'Naghten's acquittal for the homicide of Edward Drummond, whom he mistook for British Prime Minister Robert Peel. The rules define the defense as "at the ...