Abstract

“Sleep. Your eyelids are getting heavy. Sleep. Watch the swinging object. Concentrate. When you awake you will be completely under my power.” These words are familiar language to almost all of us, from images of the popular media, of a hypnotist attempting to place a subject in a hypnotic state. This subject has proved to be a source of fascination for many, and a source of intense debate in both psychological theory and jurisprudence for over two centuries, largely because of one controversial issue: can a person be induced to commit acts which are against his or her normal prudence and moral standards by means of hypnosis (or its historical antecedent, mesmerism)? The mysterious power of hypnotic coercion has moreover been absorbed into the popular consciousness, as reflected by the issue frequently featuring in fiction. For a single telling example, note the words of the villainous Baron Gruner to Sherlock Holmes: “You have heard of post-hypnotic suggestion, Mr Holmes? Well you will see how it works, for a man of personality can use hypnotism without any vulgar passes or tomfoolery.” The notoriety of hypnotic techniques is no doubt in no small measure due to accounts of sexual coercion of hypnotized subjects, as evidenced in the 1976 New South Wales Supreme Court case of R v Palmer, where a lay hypnotist was convicted on charges of rape, attempted rape and indecent assault. Evidence that this threat has been regarded as real by the courts even though no such case has arisen in South African law emerges from the declaring undesirable under the Publications and Entertainment Act 26 of 1963 of the magazine “True Men” for the publication of an article entitled “Amateur Hypnotism … Ruins 50 Girls a Week”. Gibson notes that “the idea that one person can dominate the will of another by occult or arcane means” goes back to the dawn of history, and is founded in pre-scientific ideas about magic and witchcraft. It has furtherbeen suggested by Gibson that in the present day, “hypnosis” has become a construct which has replaced “witchcraft” in the context of an accused performing criminal acts through an agent by means of coercion (perhaps this statement applies to both Anglo-American and European systems, less so to SA where witchcraft is as yet still a significant issue). This process has been aided by the proliferation of myths which have come to be established surrounding the notion of hypnosis in the public mind. The myths include: that hypnosis is done to the subject (as opposed to being self-induced); that it involves a battle of wills, with the stronger party (the Svengali-like hypnotist) winning over the weaker one; that the hypnotist must be a charismatic person; that hypnotic subjects are foolish or weak; that the hypnotist has unlimited power over the subject; that hypnosis is equivalent to sleep or loss of consciousness; that hypnosis is dangerous and destructive of the will; that hypnosis is a cure-all; that hypnosis confers special powers on subjects; that the hypnotic trance is irreversible; that hypnosis is fakery or sham behaviour; that hypnosis is a “truth serum” and that there are people who cannot be hypnotized. The law is not immune to these myths, and hypnotism has yet to be formally categorized in the general principles of criminal law. The search for a clear and rational explanation of the nature of hypnosis has further not beenassisted by the differing theories which have been offered in this regard. As will be indicated later, the courts (rather unsurprisingly) have also found difficulty with the concept.

Highlights

  • When you awake you will be completely under my power.”. These words are familiar language to almost all of us, from images of the popular media, of a hypnotist attempting to place a subject in a hypnotic state. This subject has proved to be a source of fascination for many, and a source of intense debate in both psychological theory and jurisprudence for over two centuries, largely because of one controversial issue: can a person be induced to commit acts which are against his or her normal prudence and moral standards by means of hypnosis? The mysterious power of hypnotic coercion has been absorbed into the popular consciousness, as reflected by the issue frequently featuring in fiction

  • If it is accepted that hypnotic coercion can induce crime, this would allow for a hypnotism defence, and concomitant criminal liability on the part of the hypnotist, who could be held liable as a perpetrator, using the subject as an innocent agent if the crime is committed, or on the basis of incitement if the crime is not committed

  • It is evident that an authoritative answer to the question of whether hypnotic coercion can induce crime is not possible

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Summary

Introduction

Gibson (“‘Can Hypnosis Compel People to Commit Harmful, Immoral and Criminal Acts?: A Review of the Literature” 1991 8(3) Contemporary Hypnosis 129) notes that “the idea that one person can dominate the will of another by occult or arcane means” goes back to the dawn of history, and is founded in pre-scientific ideas about magic and witchcraft It has further been suggested by Gibson (1991 8(3) Contemporary Hypnosis 129) that in the present day, “hypnosis” has become a construct which has replaced “witchcraft” in the context of an accused performing criminal acts through an agent by means of coercion (perhaps this statement applies to both AngloAmerican and European systems, less so to SA where witchcraft is as yet still a significant issue). The varying theoretical explanations for the phenomenon of hypnosis render a single authoritative definition problematic, a safe generalization is that hypnosis involves heightened suggestibility and suspension of disbelief (Shaw “Trances, Trials and Tribulations” 1994 11 Touro Law Review 145 152; Council on Scientific Affairs “Scientific Status of Refreshing Recollection by the Use of Hypnosis” 1985 253 JAMA 1918 1919, cited in Crasilneck and Hall Clinical Hypnosis: Principles and Applications 2ed (1985) 439; and Marshall “Relation of the Unconscious to Intention” 1966 52 Virginia Law Review 1256 1267-1268, cited in Denno “Criminal Law in a Post-Freudian World” 2005 University of Illinois Law Review 601 630)

Theoretical aspects
Legal aspects
How then should the law respond?
Conclusion
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