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1 Chapter 10 Minds and Crime: Alcohol, Drugs & Mental Illness

1 Chapter 10 Minds and Crime: Alcohol, Drugs & Mental Illness

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Page 1: 1 Chapter 10 Minds and Crime: Alcohol, Drugs & Mental Illness

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Chapter 10 Minds and Crime:

Alcohol, Drugs & Mental Illness

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Chapter Summary

Chapter Ten is an overview of altered minds and crime. The Chapter begins with an overview of the relationship between alcohol, alcoholism, and crime.

The Chapter continues with an overview of the types of illicit drugs, and the relationship between illicit drugs and crime.

The Chapter concludes with an overview of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and how mental illness is associated with criminality.

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Chapter Summary

After reading this chapter, students should be able to:

Understand the relationship between alcohol and crime

Discuss the drug classification and the relationship between drugs and crime

Describe the main mental disorders associated with crime

Understand the relationship between mental illness and crime

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The Scope of the Alcohol/Crime Problem

Of all the substances used to alter mood and consciousness, alcohol is the one most directly linked to crime, especially violent crime.

One third of all arrests in the United States are for alcohol-related offenses.

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The Direct Effects of Alcohol on Behavior

The effects of alcohol on behavior is a function of the interactions of the pharmacological properties of the substance, the individual’s physiology and personality, and the social and cultural context in which the substance is ingested.

Alcohol raises dopamine levels, decreases serotonin, and increases GABA, a major inhibitor of internal stimuli such as fear, anxiety, and stress.

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Contextual Factors

Alcohol is a releaser of behaviors that we normally want to keep under control.

In some social contexts, drinking may lead to violence, but not others.

Experimental research has shown that drinking increases males’ fantasies of power and domination.

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Contextual Factors

Two of the major cultural factors influencing the relationship between alcohol consumption and criminal behavior are: defining a drinking occasion as a time out period in which control are loosened from usual behavior and a willingness to hold a person less responsible for their actions when drinking than when sober by attributing the blame to alcohol.

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Contextual Factors

Binge drinkers: Consume anywhere between 5 and 10 drinks in a few hours time and are particularly likely to define drinking as a time out period.

Heavy alcohol intake has a substantial disinhibiting effect on behavior; so alcohol-induced disinhibition may be considered a cause of anti-social acts.

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Contextual Factors

The substance and the setting are secondary in causal importance to traits of individuals drinking the beverage of their choice in the settings of their choice.

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Alcoholism: Type I and Type II

Alcoholism: A chronic disease condition marked by progressive incapacity to control alcohol consumption despite psychological, spiritual, social, or physiological disruptions.

Most alcoholics do not get into serious trouble with the law.

Type I alcoholism: Characterized by a mild abuse, minimal criminality, and passive-dependent personality.

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Alcoholism: Type I and Type II

Type II alcoholism: Characterized by early onset, violence, and criminality, and is largely limited to males.

Heritability estimates for Type II alcoholism are about 0.90 and about 0.40 for Type I alcoholism indicating that environmental factors are much more important to understanding Type I alcoholism than Type II alcoholism.

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The Extent of the Illicit Drug Problem

The Harrison Narcotic Act of 1914 was the benchmark act for changing America’s concept of drugs and their use.

The Harrison Act reduced the number of addicts, but it also spawned criminal black market operations and ultimately many more addicts.

As with delinquency and crime, drug use rises to a peak in the age 18-20 category and then drops precipitously.

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Drug Addiction

Drug addiction: Compulsive drug-seeking behavior where acquiring and using a drug becomes the most important activity in the user’s life.

Physical dependence: Changes to the body that have occurred after repeated use of it and necessitates its continued administration to avoid withdrawal symptoms.

Psychological dependence: The deep craving for the drug and the feeling that one cannot function without it.

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Figure 10.2 Illicit Drug Use in Past Month by Age:

2004

Source: Department of Health and Human Services, National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2005.

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Table 10.1 Illicit Drug Use in Lifetime, Past Year, and Past Month

Among Persons Age 12 or Older: Percentages, 2003 and 2004

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Drug Classification

Schedule I substances—those that have high abuse liability and no medical use in the United States.

Schedule II substances—equally high abuse liability, but have some approved medical usage.

Schedule III and Schedule IV substances—moderate to moderately high abuse liability and are legally available with prescription.

Schedule V substances—can be purchased without prescription.

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The Drugs/Violence Link

Narcotics drugs are those that reduce the sense of pain, tension, and anxiety and produce a drowsy sense of euphoria (e.g. heroin).

The stimulants have effects opposite to those of narcotics (e.g. cocaine, crack, methamphetamine).

Hallucinogenic drugs are mind altering drugs (e.g. LSD and Peyote).

Synthetic look-alike, or designer drugs fall into the general family of psychoactive substances.

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Figure 10.3 Global Cocaine and Heroin Trafficking Routes: Countries of

Origin and Major Countries of Destination.

Source: The National Drug Control Strategy: 2000 Annual Report. Washington, DC:U.S. Government Printing Office.

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Source: The National Drug Control Strategy: 2000 Annual Report. Washington, DC:U.S. Government Printing Office.

Figure 10.3 Global Cocaine and Heroin Trafficking Routes: Countries of

Origin and Major Countries of Destination.

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Figure 10.4 Illegal Drug Marketing from Grower to Market

Grower Processor Transporter Wholesaler Retailer

Farmers plant and harvest poppy, coca, and marijuana crops

Use of chemicals such as motor oil, sulfuric acid, kerosene, and insecticides to refine product

Smugglers use planes, boats, trucks, and many other methods to get product to wholesaler

Organized criminal groups cut product and distribute it to dealers

Deals directly with consumer in crack houses or on street

Grower Processor Transporter Wholesaler Retailer

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What Causes Drug Abuse?

Paul Goldstein’s tripartite framework: Illegal drugs are associated with violence in three ways:

Pharmacological Economic-compulsive Systemic violence: Violence associated with

traditionally aggressive patterns of interaction within the system of drug distribution and use.

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What Causes Drug Abuse?

Economic-compulsive violence: Violence associated with efforts to obtain money to finance the high cost of illicit drugs.

Pharmacological violence: Violence induced by the pharmacological properties of the drug itself.

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What Causes Drug Abuse?

Gottfredson and Hirschi: Crime and drug usage are the same thing—that is the manifestation of low self-control.

Anomie theory: Drug abuse is a retreatist adaptation, and drug dealing is an innovative adaptation.

Social control theory: Drug abusers lack attachment to pro-social others and lack a state in conformity.

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What Causes Drug Abuse?

Social-learning and subculture theories: Drug abuse reflects differential exposure to individuals and groups.

Conflict theory: As the rich get richer, the poor poorer and economic opportunities are shrinking for the uneducated and the unskilled, drug dealers have taken firm root among the increasingly demoralized, disorganized, and politically powerless “underclass.”

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Does Drug Abuse Cause Crime?

Illicit drug abuse is associated with criminal behavior.

A large body of research indicates that drug abuse does not appear to initiate a criminal career, although it does increase the extent and seriousness of one.

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Table 10.2 Male and Female Adult Arrestees Testing Positive for Various

Drugs (in Percentages) MALES

CityAny of Five

Drugsa

Multiple Drugs

Cocaine Heroin Methamphetamine

Marijuana

Atlanta 72.4 73.5 49.8 3.0 2.0 41.8

Chicago 86.0 86.0 50.6 24.9 1.4 53.2

Dallas 62.3 63.8 32.5 6.9 5.8 39.1

Houston 61.7 61.9 22.6 5.7 2.1 47.5

Los Angeles

68.6 68.9 23.5 2.0 28.7 47.5

New York 67.7 72.7 35.7 15.0 0.0

43.1

Philadelphia

67.0 68.8

30.3 11.5 0.6 45.8

Phoenix 74.1 76.8 23.4 4.4 38.3 45.8

San Diego

66.8 71.2 10.3 5.1 36.2 41.6

Washington

65.6 65.8 26.5 9.8 0.7 37.4

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City Any of Five

Drugs a

Multiple Drugs c

Cocaine Heroin Methamphetamine

Marijuana

Albany, NY

60.9 65.2 34.8 4.3 0.0 34.8

Chicago 61.1 66.7 33.3 22.2 0.0 38.9

Denver 69.1 24.9 52.5 6.1 5.0 34.3

Honolulu 74.5 27.7 8.5 6.4 57.4 29.8

Los Angeles

59.3 63.0 25.9 2.1 18.5 36.7

New York 67.7 72.7 35.7 15.0 0.0

43.1

New Orleans

58.8 17.8

37.3 13.3 0.8 30.3

Phoenix 74.6 78.5 16.8 6.1 41.6 31.6

San Diego 69.1 72.6 15.2 8.7 47.1 29.1

Washington

61.1 66.7 30.9 10.3 0.0 29.1

Source: Adapted from the Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring Program.a. The five drugs are cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamine, opiates, and phencyclidine (PCP).b. Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, and Philadelphia did not sample female arrestees; Albany, Denver, Honolulu, and New Orleans were substituted.c. Multiple drugs are any of nine drugs that include the basic five plus barbiturates, methadone, benzodiazepines, and propoxyphene.

FEMALES

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Mental Disorders and Crime

Mental disorders: Clinically significant conditions characterized by alterations in thinking, mood, or behavior associated with personal distress and/or impaired functioning.

Schizophrenia: The most widespread of the psychotic disorders.

Schizophrenia comes in a variety of subtypes.

Catatonic: Rigid and unresponsive Paranoid: Hostile and distrusting

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Mental Disorders and Crime

Heberphrenic: Frenetic and wild Reactive: Usually marked by the onset of

an acutely stressful experience. Bipolar disorder: A disorder in which

individuals alternate between the poles of extreme elation or euphoria and deep depression.The prevalence of bipolar disorder in the general population is about 1.6%.

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Causality: The Diathesis/Stress Model

The genetic basis of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder is well-established although how strong the genetic effect is relative to non-genetic effects remains an open question.

Both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are primarily disorders of brain chemistry.

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Causality: The Diathesis/Stress Model

Diathesis/stress model: A biosocial model that maintains that although mental illnesses reflect an underlying genetic vulnerability, they are often the products of multiple other factors interacting with this vulnerability.

People with mental disorders are disproportionately from the lower socioeconomic classes of society and from urban as opposed to rural areas.

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The Link Between Mental Illness and Crime

The majority of the mentally ill are nonviolent, and because of their vulnerability, they are more likely to be victims of violence than perpetrators.

The mentally ill most at risk for committing violent acts are the homeless, those who use alcohol and other drugs, and those who do not take their antipsychotic medications.

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The Link Between Mental Illness and Crime

Although the mentally disordered are at greater risk for committing crimes, especially violent crimes, than the average person, they are few in number, and thus their crimes constitute only a very small proportion of all crimes committed.