State v. Hall
Iowa Supreme Court
214 N.W.2d 205 (1974)
- Written by Rich Walter, JD
Facts
The State of Iowa (plaintiff) prosecuted Allen Lee Hall (defendant) for murder. At trial, Hall admitted killing his victim, but pleaded that he was insane at the time. Hall claimed that he killed the victim while experiencing hallucinogenic delusions produced by ingesting a pill which, according to Hall's expert witnesses, probably contained the mind-altering drug LSD. Hall said a casual acquaintance gave him the pill, telling Hall it would provide a "little sunshine" and make Hall feel "groovy." Hall voluntarily ingested the pill, not knowing that it contained LSD or that it would trigger hallucinogenic delusions. The judge refused to instruct the jury on drug-induced temporary insanity as a complete defense to a murder charge. The jury convicted Hall and he appealed to the Iowa Supreme Court.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Uhlenhopp, J.)
Dissent (LeGrand, J.)
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