An Aspect of Mental Illness and Violence: The Relationship between the Severity of Criminal Charges and Psychopathology
Abstract
The exaggeration of symptoms and malingering are an important aspect of psychological assessment in a forensic setting. This study examined criminality and scores on the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI) validity scales to investigate the relation between psychopathology and malingering. It was the investigators' hypothesis that severity of the criminal charges would be positively correlated with the Negative Impression (NIM) and Malingering (MAL) index scores on the PAI, showing increased attempts made by patients to portray themselves in a negative light for secondary gain (i.e., reduced sentence, extended period of admission rather than return to jail; to remain out of punitive segregation). As predicted, the results showed a positive correlation between the NIM scale score and the category of crime. Results also showed a positive correlation between the MAL index and crime severity. The results are consistent with the belief that as the severity of the crime increases so does the likelihood of malingering or feigning of symptoms for secondary gain.
References
Alterman, A.I., Snider, E.C., Cacciola, J.S., Brown, L.S., Zaballero, A., & Siddiqui, N. (1996). Evidence for response set effects in structured research interviews. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 184, 403-410.
Cashel, M.L., Rogers, R.R., & Sewell, K.W. (1995). The Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI) and the detection of defensiveness. Assessment, 2, 333-342.
Edens, J.F., Cruise, K.R., & Buffington-Vollum, K. (2001). Forensic and correctional applications of the Personality Assessment Inventory. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 19, 519-543.
Edens, J.F., Hart, S.D., Johnson, D.W., Johnson, J.K., & Oliver, M.E. (2000). Use of the Personality Assessment Inventory to assess psychopathy in offender population. Psychological Assessment, 12, 132-193.
Hall, H.V., & Poirier, J.G. (2000). Detecting malingering and deception: Forensic distortion analysis. Florida: CRC Press.
Morey, L.C. (1991). Personality Assessment Inventory: Professional manual. Odessa, Florida: Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc.
Morey, L.C. (1996). An interpretive guide to the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI). Odessa, Florida: Psychological Assessment Resources.
Morey, L.C., & Quigley, B.D. (2002). The use of the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI) in assessing offenders. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 46, 333-349.
Poythress, N.G., Edens, J.F,. & Watkins, M.M. (2001). The relationship between psychopathic personality features and malingering symptoms of major mental illness. Law and Human Behavior, 25, 567-582.
Resnick, R. (1997). Malingered psychosis. In R. Rogers (Ed.), Clinical assessment of malingering and deception (2nd ed., pp. 47-67). New York: Guilford Press.
Rice, M.E., Harris, G.T., & Quincy, V.L. (1996) Treatment for forensic patients. In B.D. Sales & S. Shah (Eds.), Mental health and law: Research, policy, and services (pp. 141-189). Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press.
Rogers, R., Ornduff, S.R., & Sewell, K.W. (1993). Feigning specific disorders: A study of the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI). Journal of Personality Assessment, 60, 554-560.
Rogers, R., Sewell, K.W., Morey, L.C., & Ustad, K.L. (1996). Detection of feigned mental disorders on the Personality Assessment Inventory: A discriminant analysis. Journal of Personality Assessment, 67, 629-640.
Rogers, R., Ustad, K.L., & Salekin, R.T. (1997). Convergent validity of the Personality Assessment Inventory: A study of emergency referrals in a correctional setting. Assessment, 5, 399-405.
Schinka, J.A. (1995). Personality Assessment Inventory Scale characteristics and factor structure in the assessment of alcohol dependence. Journal of Personality Assessment, 64, 101-111.
Smith, S. (2001, July 15). Eighty-nine percent of state adult correctional facilities provide mental health services for prisoners [Press Release]. Washington DC: Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Smith, S. (2004, November 7). U.S. prison population approaches 1.5 million. Press Release: [Press Release]. Washington DC: Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Trull, T.J. (1995). Borderline personality disorder features in nonclinical young adults: Identification and validation. Psychological Assessment, 7, 33-41.
Wang, E.W., Rogers, R., Giles, C.L., Diamond, P.M., Herrington-Wang, L.E., & Taylor, E.R. (1997). A pilot study of the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI) in corrections: Assessment of malingering, suicide risk, and aggression in male inmates. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 15, 469-482.
White, L.J. (1988). Is Hare's Psychopathy Checklist reliable without the interview? Psychological Reports, 62, 931-934.
Copyright (c) 2017 The New School Psychology Bulletin
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.