GPDSC  
About UsResourcesCPD SystemPress Room
Google  GPDSC Internet
Quicklinks

About OMHA
Directions to Our Office
Seminars
Psych Meds 101

American Psychological Association
American Academy pf Psychiatry and the Law
Legal Aid-GA
NAMI
Georgia Association of Community Service Boards By-Laws
American Academy of Forensic Psychology
Consensus Project

Sabrina Rhinehart
Mental Health Advocate

Alicia Thomas
Senior Staff Attorney

Charles Hess
Staff Attorney

Susan Myrick
Paralegal


Office of the Mental
Health Advocate

104 Marietta St.
Suite 200
Atlanta, GA 30303
(404) 232-8900
(800) 676-4432
Fax: (404) 651-5706

Contact Us


Site Design by Arno



Mental Health Advocate
resourcescontact us

Kenneth Shepherd Has His Day in Georgia’s Supreme Court

picture of scales
KENNETH SHEPHERD VS. THE STATE OF GEORGIA S05A1561

On September 7, 2005 the case of Kenneth Shepherd, convicted of murder and a victim of severe psychosis, was argued before the Supreme Court of Georgia. Mr. Shepherd is appealing a DeKalb County jury verdict finding him Not Guilty of Malice Murder by Reason of Insanity and Guilty But Mentally Ill on the charge of Felony Murder. This is a case of first impression and places the mentally ill client in the unusual position of having been given two judgments for one actual murder. If the sentence is not remanded by the Georgia Supreme Court, he will have to served an indeterminate sentence at a Mental Hospital under the jurisdiction of the Department of Human Resources, then once he is released from that commitment he will then be transferred to the Department of Corrections to serve out a Life sentence based on the Guilty But Mentally Ill verdict. Additionally, the possibility of Mr. Shepherd being transferred to prison and a life sentence wouldn’t give him much incentive to respond to mental health treatment.

Mr. Shepherd’s trial attorneys were Ms. Claudia Saari and Mr. Bob Storms. At trial, it was undisputed that Mr. Shepherd suffers from severe psychosis. The facts brought out at trial were that he shot his younger sister while under a delusional compulsion and that he did not possess the mental capacity to distinguish right from wrong. It is believed that Mr. Shepherd believed that he was defending himself against his sister’s sexual aggression. With the NGRI verdict, it cannot be determined under what insanity theory that the jury believed that Mr. Shepherd was laboring under. The main issue at trial was his mental state at the time of the offense. Mr. Gerard Kleinrock, Mr. Shepherd’s appellate counsel, argued the point succinctly before the Justices during oral arguments, and pointed out that the NGRI verdict, which involved a finding of insanity, was mutually exclusive of the verdict of Guilty but Mentally Ill, which necessarily involved a finding that at that very same moment he was merely “mentally ill.” In addition, having two different judgments imposed for a single homicide raises a substantial double jeopardy issue. The State originally presented a waiver argument, which was that the two verdicts weren’t necessarily irreconcilable. The State abandoned the waiver argument, during the oral arguments before the Supreme Court Justices.

The Office of the Mental Health Advocate filed an amicus brief urging that the civil commitment to DHR, which is technically an acquittal, trumps the criminal judgment and could not be disturbed in further proceedings. The questions that the Justices asked both counsel suggested that they were sympathetic to Mr. Shepherd’s legal position. The DeKalb County District Attorney’s office had the difficult task of providing justification for Mr. Shepherd serving two incompatible verdicts.

If you are seeking the final resolution of this soon to be landmark case, please call our office at 404-232-8900 or check our website for further details.


Our Mission
The Office of the Mental Health Advocate (OMHA) was created by statute in 1996 to provide services to attorneys representing criminal defendants with mental health challenges. OMHA monitors cases in Georgia involving pleas of Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity (NGRI) and it directly represents a limited number of insanity acquittees.  We provide services state-wide as a way of assisting attorneys, the hospitals, and the courts in criminal cases involving mentally ill defendants.

Announcements and Articles
Wednesday, January 9, 2008 11:40 AM

Check here frequently for OMHA news and articles about mental health issues in the criminal justice system.

February 7 Seminar: "Psychotic Illness, Cognition & Functional Outcomes"
line

Legislative Update: Changes in 17-7-130 Incompetent to Stand Trial (IST)
line

The Office of the Mental Health Advocate Welcomes its 2007 Summer Interns
Our office has added four interns to its staff for the summer. The interns are: Amber L. Bagley, Emory Law School, 3L; Justin Holcombe, Georgia State University College of Law, 2L; Sheena Bosket, Georgia State University College of Law, 2L; and Santisa Hambrick, Atlanta Technical College, sophomore. Our office welcomes the extra help and the energy that this group of interns brings to defending the mentally challenged.
Amber L. Bagley
Amber L. Bagley
Sheena Boskett
Sheena Bosket
Santisa Hambrick
Santisa Hambrick
Justin Holcombe
Justin Holcombe
line

Legislative Update - Changes in 17-7-130 Incompetent to Stand Trial (IST)
line

Macon Gets New Mental Health Court
line

Yvonne Sherrill Receives the Department of Human Resources Forensic Services’ 1st Annual Debra Blum Award
line

Women at Risk: Neonaticide, Infanticide and Filicide
line

Clarifying the Process for Defendants Found Guilty but Mentally Ill or Guilty but Mentally Retarded
line

Judge Winston P. Bethel Wins Debra J Blum Award
line

Aspergers' Syndrome - The Odd, Eccentric, Socially Impaired Have Help
line

Kenneth Shepherd Gets His
Day in Court

line

Shock Therapy: It's Not a
Thing of the Past

Psychiatric Medications 101 has been updated.

A Victory for Competency in Simms Case
line

The Governor's Pilot Mental Health Diversion Program: The HELP Program, A Hall County Inititative

Dealing with a Schizophrenic Client

The Standard of Review for Competency Challenged

Honoring Debbie Blum, a Mental Health Pioneer

PDF Some files on this page, denoted by the icon to the left, require the Adobe Acrobat Reader. You may download the software, free of charge, by clicking here.


DOC Some files on this page, denoted by the icon to the left, require Microsoft Word. If you do not have the software, you may download the Microsoft Word Viewer, free of charge, by clicking here.