The Insanity Defense: A Public Danger
If certain individuals by virtue of their mental condition pose a continuing and unpredictable threat, then the appropriate response is permanent removal from situations where they can harm others.
Jim Cardoza | April 15, 2026
On August 22, 2025, Iryna Zarutska, a 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee who had fled her country because of the Russian invasion, was stabbed from behind three times while seated on a train. The perpetrator, Decarlos Dejuan Brown Jr., was arrested and charged with first-degree murder but was later determined to be mentally incapable of standing trial.
Cases like that of Iryna Zarutska bring into sharp focus the gap between abstract theories and concrete consequences. Here is what happens when dangerous individuals intersect with systems more concerned with process than protection. This tragedy is more than a loss of life; it underscores a recurring pattern of sheltering the criminally insane from logical consequences.
The phrase “criminally insane” somehow diminishes the threat they pose and rests on a profound misunderstanding. If anything, such a designation ought to sharpen our awareness of that threat. A person who commits violent acts within the bounds of rational calculation may be deterred by consequences, constrained by incentives, or rehabilitated through changes in circumstance. But a person who commits those same acts without regard to reality itself -- untethered from reason, immune to ordinary incentives -- presents a far more intractable danger.
Yet modern discourse often moves in the opposite direction. Once the label of insanity is applied, the conversation shifts almost immediately from protection to treatment and from accountability to sympathy. This is not because the facts have changed, but because the narrative has. The perpetrator is no longer seen primarily as a threat to others but as a victim of his own condition. The victims of his actions, meanwhile, fade into the background.
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https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/04/the_insanity_defense_a_public_danger.html