Here is a comprehensive study guide designed directly from the professor’s final exam review instructions in Class 11, combined with the specific concepts highlighted as highly testable throughout the term.
Exam Scope & Structure Note: The final exam covers only post-midterm material (Mental Illness in the Court through Homicide). The exam consists of 90 multiple-choice questions and 4 short answer questions.
Important Short Answer Clarification: In Class 11, the professor explicitly stated that the 4 short answer questions will come from four specific topics: Mental Illness in the Court, Psychopathy, Young Offenders, and Homicide. They explicitly noted that Sentencing and Risk Assessment will not have short answer questions (they will be evaluated via multiple-choice).
PART 1: SHORT ANSWER STUDY GUIDE
Focus your short answer preparation heavily on these four core topics and their primary frameworks.
1. Psychopathy
- The Four Facets of Psychopathy (The “Ingredients”): The professor called the 4-factor model the “most important slide for the whole class”. You must be able to list the facets and their underlying characteristics:
- Interpersonal: Manipulative, grandiose, deceptive, dominant, insincere, and egocentric.
- Affective: Lacking remorse, lacking empathy, shallow emotions, and failing to accept responsibility for actions.
- Behavioral: Impulsive, needing stimulation/excitement, irresponsible, and lacking realistic long-term goals.
- Antisocial: Early childhood behavior problems, juvenile delinquency, and criminal versatility.
- Psychopathy and Violence Correlations: This is a major exam trap. You must know that psychopathy is correlated equally with both reactive and instrumental violence. However, when psychopaths commit homicide, it is overwhelmingly instrumental (planned, cold-blooded, goal-directed).
- The Survival Curve Graph: The professor emphasized knowing how to read the PCL-R survival graph. Know that individuals with a PCL-R score of less than 15 have an approximate 70% probability of surviving in the community for 25 years without receiving a new violent conviction.
2. Young Offenders
- Trajectories of Youthful Offenders (Moffitt’s Model): The professor stressed this is a “very important model” to know and “show off on the final”.
- Adolescent-Limited (AL): Normative trajectory encompassing roughly 70% of the population. Antisocial behavior begins and ends in adolescence, is largely influenced by peers, and involves less serious crimes.
- Life-Course Persistent (LCP): Chronic trajectory beginning in early childhood and persisting into adulthood. It is linked to neurological/neurodevelopmental deficits (e.g., ADHD), adverse environments, poverty, and severe aggression.
- Why Youth Receive Less Severe Sanctions: Be prepared to list the four core reasons youth are sentenced differently than adults:
- They are less likely/able to appreciate the seriousness of their actions.
- They are less able to control impulses due to an underdeveloped prefrontal cortex.
- They are more susceptible to peer pressure and the influence of others.
- There is a greater hope and potential for successful treatment and rehabilitation.
- Hostile Attribution Bias: A cognitive distortion where a youth interprets ambiguous social situations (e.g., a peer breaking their toy while they aren’t looking) as intentional and hostile, leading to reactive aggression.
3. Homicide
- Typologies of Serial Killers (Holmes & DeBurger): The professor explicitly stated, “Typologies of serial killers, very important… Everyone’s gonna be really good on this question”. Memorize the four main motives:
- Visionary: Psychotic; killing in response to delusions or hallucinations (e.g., hearing voices).
- Mission-Oriented: Targeting and eliminating a specific group of people deemed undesirable (e.g., Gary Ridgway targeting sex workers).
- Power/Control: Motivated by the desire to have absolute dominance and total control over the victim’s life and death.
- Hedonistic: Killing for pleasure or gain. Sub-divided into Lust (sexual gratification), Thrill (excitement/adrenaline), and Comfort (financial/material gain).
- Multiple Murderer Definitions:
- Mass Murder: Multiple victims in a single event at one general location, with no cooling-off period.
- Spree Murder: Multiple victims in one continuous event across two or more locations, with no cooling-off period.
- Serial Murder: Multiple victims in separate events at different locations, with a distinct psychological cooling-off period.
- Female vs. Male Serial Killers: Understand that female serial killers differ significantly. They are far more likely to be place-specific (e.g., healthcare settings/”Angels of Death” or homes/”Black Widows”), use poison, target known victims or family members, and kill for financial gain (comfort-oriented).
4. Mental Illness in the Court
- Fitness to Stand Trial vs. NCRMD:
- Fitness deals with the defendant’s mental state at the present time of the trial (can they understand the charges, the consequences, and communicate with counsel?).
- NCRMD (Not Criminally Responsible) deals with the defendant’s mental state at the time the offense was committed (did a disease of the mind prevent them from knowing the nature/quality of the act?).
- Automatism: Understand the difference between non-mental disorder automatism (involuntary behavior due to an external factor like a physical blow, sleepwalking, or carbon monoxide, leading to a not guilty verdict) and mental disorder automatism (which results in an NCRMD verdict). The Kenneth Parks sleepwalking case is the prime example of non-mental disorder automatism.
PART 2: MULTIPLE-CHOICE HIGHLIGHTS
While not on the short answer section, the professor emphasized several specific items that are highly testable via multiple choice.
Risk Assessment
- Decision Errors (The 2×2 Matrix): The professor said you “just have to hammer it into your mind” because it is tricky.
- False Positive: Predicting a person is high risk/violent, but they actually do not reoffend. This unjustly violates the offender’s rights by keeping them locked up unnecessarily.
- False Negative: Predicting a person is low risk/safe, but they actually do go on to commit a violent act. This compromises public safety.
- Note: The “Base Rate Problem” dictates that predicting extremely rare events (like school shootings) inevitably leads to a massive number of False Positives.
- Types of Risk Factors: The professor warned they will likely give you a hypothetical risk factor and ask you to categorize it:
- Static (Historical): Unchangeable facts from the past (e.g., age of first arrest, experiencing child maltreatment, having a past criminal record).
- Stable Dynamic: Variables that can fluctuate over long periods and be changed via treatment (e.g., antisocial attitudes, substance abuse problems, ongoing symptoms of trauma).
- Acute Dynamic: Variables of short duration that change rapidly and usually immediately precede an offense (e.g., sudden intoxication, extreme anger).
- Risk Assessment Approaches: Know the comparison table intimately:
- Unstructured Clinical Judgment (UCJ): Subjective, informal, lacks guidelines, and is highly prone to “illusory correlations” (false beliefs that intuitive feelings correlate with actual danger).
- Actuarial: Purely statistical, heavily relies on static/historical items, and produces exact mathematical risk estimates/probabilities (e.g., Static-99R). Very consistent, but inflexible as it ignores dynamic/protective factors.
- Structured Professional Judgment (SPJ): A middle-ground that systematically reviews a predefined list of static and dynamic factors but leaves the final decision (Low, Moderate, High) up to clinical judgment (e.g., HCR-20). Highly flexible but lacks exact probability estimates.
Sentencing and Parole
- The RNR Model (Risk, Need, Responsivity):
- Risk: Match the intensity of the intervention to the offender’s risk level (high-risk gets intensive treatment; low-risk gets minimal/no treatment).
- Need: Target only criminogenic needs (changeable factors reliably linked to crime, like antisocial associates and substance abuse, not general mental health issues like low self-esteem).
- Responsivity: Match the treatment delivery to the offender’s learning style (e.g., using Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/CBT).
- Effectiveness: Reductions in recidivism are highest when all RNR principles are applied in a community setting.
- Release Success Rates: Know that offenders granted Full Parole are more likely to be successful upon release than those granted Statutory Release.
Disparities in the Justice System
- Sentencing Disparity Types:
- Systematic Disparity: Consistent differences between different judges (e.g., one judge is always exceptionally harsh, another is always lenient).
- Unsystematic Disparity: Inconsistencies within the same judge over time, often due to mood, fatigue, or extraneous daily factors (e.g., Judge Lee denying all bail because she got a speeding ticket that morning).
- Indigenous Offender Statistics: Indigenous offenders are roughly 3 times more likely to receive a harsher sentence compared to non-Indigenous people, despite being less likely to commit violent crimes on average.

