Title: Forensic Aspects of Autism Spectrum Disorders
1Forensic Aspects of Autism Spectrum Disorders
- Dr Kiriakos Xenitidis
- Adult ASD ADHD Service, The Maudsley Hospital,
SLAM - Dept of Forensic and Neurodevelopmental Science,
Institute of Psychiatry
2Wing 1981 ASD Triad of impairment
- Qualitative impairments in reciprocal social
interaction - Abnormalities in verbal and non-verbal
communication - Restricted and repetitive range of behaviours,
interests and activities
3Aspergers Syndrome
- Among individuals with high-functioning autism,
the term Asperger syndrome is reserved for
people for whom the social interaction and
restricted patterns of behaviour occur in the
context of - normal early language development
- no cognitive impairment
4- Hans Asperger (1944)
- Some children with AS mischievous and malicious
without regard for the consequences for other
people.
5Prevalence of autistic disorders in children.
- Ehlers Gillberg (1993, Gothenburg) 71 per
10,000 children for Aspergers (36) descriptions
and other autistic conditions (35) 320,000
people in the UK). - Baird, Simonoff et al (2006) 1161 per 10 000
incl prevalence of childhood autism was (389)
and other ASD (772) Ratio male female 41 -
151. - Unclear whether the increase is true or due to
better ascertainment, broader diagn. criteria.
6ASD in Adulthood
- Brugha et al (2011) Community prevalance 0.9
- Nylander, Gillberg (2013) ADHD or ASD diagnoses
entified in an adult psychiatry register
(N56,462) - ADHD was diagnosed in up to 2.7 and ASD in 1.3
of the patients. - Diagnostic delay 2-10 years
- Comorbidity in 60. Affective disorders in ADHD
Psychoses and intellectual disability in ASD
7ASD and offending
- Siponmaa, Gillberg (2001) PDD 15 of young
offenders referred for psych assess - Ghaziuddin et al. (1991)Review from 1944 to
1990 no clear link between Asperger syndrome
(AS) and violent crime. - Mouridsen (2012). Review still no body of
evidence to suppose that people with ASD are more
prone to commit offencesHowever, a small number
of serious crimes can be linked to the core
features or comorbidity
8RCPsych publication
- Advances in Psychiatric Treatment 2010 (16
37-43) -
- K Dein, M Woodbury-Smith
- No clear association between criminal behaviour
and ASD
9Rates in high security Broadmoor Hospital
- Screened male population (N 392) for Aspergers
Syndrome. - 6 clear cases identified and 3 equivocal cases.
Prevalence of 1.5 - 4.3. - 0.36 community prevalence using same criteria
(Allen 2007). - Interests commonly involving poisons and weapons.
- Average length of stay 6y, PDD length of stay
8.5y - Two of six had prior diagnosis.
- Unique challenges in terms of management
Scragg Shah (1994)
10 Broadmoor, Rampton and Moss Side
-
- All 1305 residents screened for ASD. 93.5 male
6.5 female. - 31 definite ASD 31 information insufficient for
diagnosis. - Prevalence between 2.4 and 5.3
- Mean length of stay 11y
- Circumscribed interests commonly morbid
violence, weapons, Nazism. Similar offending
patterns markedly less sexual offending.
Hare et al (1999)
11Women in High security
- 10 women in high secure had PDD (Crocombe et al
2006)
12Prison
- ASD prevalence in prisons not known.
- Fazel, Xenitidis Powell (2008) meta analysis of
12000 prisoners 0.5-1.5 had intellectual
disability - Myers (2004) A study asking staff in the Scottish
Prison Service how many cases they were aware of
yielded 19 people with an established diagnosis
of learning disability and/or ASDs across 16
prisons
13Problems with studies ...
- PDD, ASD, AS, or HfA!
- How is diagnosis defined ? ICD-10/DSM-IV or, ADI,
ADOS etc. - Ever changing rates in general population make
comparisons to forensic populations problematic. - The literature generally refers to individuals
with higher functioning autism spectrum
disorders. - Administrative bias, e.g.
- Reluctance to link mental disorder with
criminality. - Tolerance of disturbed behaviour in people with
disability - An unwillingness to prosecute where conviction
unlikely (Berney, 2004).
14Conclusions on rates
- PDD over represented compared to baseline in high
secure possibly greater in women - Greater lengths of stay
- Prison rates unknown (may be model prisoners
and unknown to prison and probation services) - No clear evidence of increase in rates of
convictions or offending - May suggest
- Relative absence of disposal/placement options
- Difficulty assessing risk
- Refractory to treatment
15All Party Parliamentary Group on Autism
- Autism and the Criminal Justice System April
2002. - Very little known about the number of people
involved with the criminal justice system, either
as perpetrators or victims. -
- No figures for people with autism in the prison
system. - No rates of offending for people with autism.
- - Only figures available are for those in the
special hospitals.
16Pattern of offending
- Case studies. Most offence types represented.
- Fire setting.
- Group studies
- 25 of community sample (Woodbury-Smith 2005)
- 63 of community sample (Siponmaa 2001)
- 16 v 10 in Special Hospital study (Hare 1999).
- Case control study only offence type to reach
statistical significance (Mouridsen 2008)
17Pattern of offending
- Sexual offending
- Low in Special Hospitals
- Rates of sexual offending generally low, esp
child sex offences (computer related crime?) - Violent offending
- Offenders with PDD more likely to have prior
convictions for assault (Elvish 2007). - Contradictory findings in Special Hospitals
(Hare 1999, Murphy 2003)
18Factors mediating offending in ASbottom-up
- 1 General factors Poor educational achievement
- Truancy
- Social exclusion
-
- 2 Factors associated with the diagnostic triad
- 3 Core deficits (a) Empathy I ToM
- II Face recognition
- (b) Executive dysfunction
- 4 Comorbidity
- 5 Late diagnosis
-
19Factors in offending in ASD
- NAS view on PDD and offending
- 1. Social naivety, being duped as unwitting
accomplices in theft and robbery. - 2. Difficulty managing unexpected changes
leading to aggression. - Inappropriate social advances being being
interpreted as sexual advances. - Obsessional interests involving dangerous topics,
- such as poisons or explosions.
20NAS offending and ASD
- Offences relating to social naivety (unwitting
accomplices of criminals) - Offences of an aggressive nature related to
routine change (eg delay in public transport). - Misunderstanding of social cues (e.g. prolonged
eye contact misinterpreted as unwanted sexual
advances). - Rigid adherence to rules (damage cars that are
parked illegally). - People with ASD often do not understand the
implications of their behaviour and due to their
difficulties with social imagination they often
do not learn from past experience. They may
repeatedly offend if not offered the correct
support and intervention. - In addition, the methods used by the police may
exacerbate a situation for someone with ASD. For
example, the use of handcuffs and restraint may
be extremely frightening for someone with ASD who
does not understand what is happening and may not
be able to communicate their fears in an
appropriate way. This, coupled with the use of
loud sirens, may cause an individual to
experience sensory overload and try to escape a
situation by running away or, in extreme
circumstances, hitting out at people, including
the police. The very presence of the police may
cause great anxiety to a law-abiding person with
ASD who has no comprehension of the crime they
may have committed.
21Possibly indicative of undiagnosed ASD (Berney,
2004)
- Inexplicable violence
- Computer crime
- Offences arising out of misjudged social
relationships - Obsessive harassment (stalking)
- Mullen et al (1995) 5 types of stalker.
- Incompetent suitor characterised by
- Isolated
- Lonely
- Socially inept.
- Typically male, underemployed, average
intelligence.
22Triad of impairments
- Impairments in reciprocal social interaction
- Lack of social understanding (Howlin 1997)
- Social naivety and lack of common sense (Wing
1997) - Misinterpretation of intentions of others as
malicious/hostile. - Poor understanding of the consequences of actions
on others. - Misuse/deliberate exploitation by others (Howlin
1997)
23Triad of impairments
- Communication
- Difficulties expressing emotional states/needs
may lead to frustration and inappropriate
attempts to communicate - Literal interpretation of language
- Stereotyped behaviours and restricted interests
- Obsessional tendencies or morbid interests
- Aggressive behaviour, often as a result of
disruption to routine -
- Rigid interpretation of rules
24Empathy (Blair 2005)
- Cognitive Empathy (Theory of Mind)
- Normal in psychopaths, abnormal in ASD
- Emotional Empathy
- Affective response to social-emotional signals of
others - Selective deficits in psychopaths (fear and
sadness) - OFC lesions (anger social response reversal)
- Motor Empathy
- Tendency to automatically mimic and synchronise
social-emotional signals and movements with those
of another person (clinically present in PDD).
25PDD and psychopathy
- PDD at Broadmoor
- None of PDD patients greater than cut off on
PCL-R - But higher scores on lack of remorse, guilt, lack
of empathy - Comparable mean PCL-R scores.
- PDD in Sweden
- Unemotionality and behavioural dyscontrol
correlate with autistic traits - Interpersonal factors no correlation possibly
core psychopathic features. - Possible overlap in offenders between some
cognitive deficits in ASD, psychopathy (and
ADHD). - Most people with PDD do not share these
characteristics (even with ASPD)!
26Specific co-morbidities in PDD
- ADHD (30-45 )
- Intellectual Disability (30-80)
- Depression (4-38)
- Anxiety Disorders (11-76)
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (25-50 )
- Schizophreniform Disorders (7-35)
- Bipolar Affective Disorder (3-9)
- Catatonia/Movement disorders (4.5-20)
- Specific Reading/Writing difficulties
27ADHD and offending
- Court records
- Youths 4 5x more likely arrested
- Multiple arrests and convictions
- Prison studies (USA, Sweden, Norway, Canada,
Germany) - 22 67 inmates hx childhood ADHD
- Up to 30 have symptoms in adulthood
- 16 in partial remission
- Rates much higher in YOI (Young, S in Fitzgerald
et al, 2007, Handbook of ADHD) - Surprising given PDD/ADHD comorbidity that rates
of offending as low as they are! - Core PDD features protective?
28Late Diagnosis
- Probably more common where IQ high
- May be more difficult because Leads to
- Absence of childhood informants Failure of
education - Confounds of comorbidity Decreased
socialisation - Skills acquisition Maladpative coping skills
- Where diagnosis difficult, management dictated by
current need (logistic and administratively
difficult) (Dein 2010) -
- Need for
- Psychiatric education re diagnosis
- Use of screening instruments in forensic settings
29Autism and the CJS
- PDD may affect Fitness
- Capacity
- Mitigation
- People with PDD not more suggestible, but may be
more compliant (North et al, 2008) -
-
30Autism and the CJS
- Autism a guide for criminal justice
professionals - Provides background information about autistic
spectrum disorders. It aims to assist all
professionals working in the Criminal Justice
System, particularly police officers, solicitors,
barristers, magistrates, justices of the peace,
the judiciary and the courts.
31Forensic treatment environments
- Minimal specialist NHS provision private sector
- Varies from area to area (e.g. LD v forensic v
general adult) - A low number of a heterogeneous group of
patients. - Causes of variation
- Type and severity of social understanding,
restricted interests, impulse control - Co-morbid mental health symptoms, challenging
behaviours, forensic presentations - Medical conditions (e.g. epilepsy syndromes)
- IQ variation (borderline to very high)
- Usually insufficient nos for local units, so
units within units, or out of area.
32Aspects of assessment
- Assess cognitive profile/theory of mind
- special interests/interaction/communication
- interpersonal history/history of bullying
- preferred routines
- anger
- comorbidity (especially ADHD)
- Functional analytic model (eg Sturmey 1996)
- Antecedents, setting factors, consequences
- Note potential for reinforcement of offending by
stress reducing consequences
33Aspects of treatment
- No established reason why not treatment as usual,
though groups difficult. - Co-morbid mental illness treatment can produce
dramatic reductions in risk - Adaptations to talking therapies (CBT)
- Greater use of visual materials
- Affective education
- More directive approach
- Social skills training (groups)
- Medication
- Visual idiographic risk monitoring tools
- Self-generated risk monitoring likely to be
difficult. Carer support usually necessary. - Risk reduction via high levels of supervision,
structure, and support graduated transitions.
34Case study
- 40 year old male
- borderline ID
- Charged with assault
- Detained under S 3 then S37
- Treatment
- Non drug
- Atypical antispychotics
35Service implications
- Prisoners with ASD (/_ ID) are a vulnerable
population - Suicide risk (Shaw, Appleby, Baker, 2003 found
3-double the rate of non ID prisoners) - increased risk of mental illness and
victimisation (Glaser Deane, 1999 Noble
Conley, 1992).
36Service implications
- Health service providers should take note of the
increased rates and consider - development of specific treatment programmes
- training of prison staff
- and promotion of links between criminal justice,
forensic mental health and intellectual
disabilities services.
37- Journal of Intellectual Disabilities and
Offending Behaviour - Special Issue 2013 Autism and Offending
Behaviour
38ARC SCOTLAND
- Supporting Offenders with learning disabilities
2010 - james.fletcher_at_arcuk.org.uk
- 0131 663 4444