Sign up for free to listen for longer

Get unlimited radio, access to exclusive and original podcasts and non-stop music stations.

Control the way you listen to your favourite music, podcasts and radio.

Already have an account?

Log in

Sign up for free to listen for longer

Get unlimited radio, access to exclusive and original podcasts and non-stop music stations.

Control the way you listen to your favourite music, podcasts and radio.

Already have an account?

Log in

JUDGEMENTS | Not guilty by virtue of mental illness

JUDGEMENTS | Not guilty by virtue of mental illness

Crime Insiders
Sea. 3 Ep. 21524 min
Wednesday
Mark as played
Share

About the episode

A quiet suburb. A brutal murder.  What happens when someone kills - but isn’t sane enough to be found guilty?  Marita Cunningham was charged with murdering 81-year-old Mae Richie in 2016.  A neighbour discovered Mae dead inside her apartment, her body covered in pillows and shopping bags.  An autopsy found she’d died by asphyxiation – and had been beaten with her own walking cane.  Marita was arrested trying to flee the scene.   Witnesses described Marita’s unsettling behaviour earlier that day, including outbursts in public, talking to herself, and showing up at her ex’s apartment uninvited.   The court had to decide whether Marita was guilty of murder – or not guilty by virtue of mental illness.  Should someone who kills, but genuinely doesn’t know reality from delusion, be found guilty of murder? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.