
Courtesy ABC News
Experts are surprised and skeptical of a Colorado judge's ruling that Aurora
theater shooter James Holmes could be subjected to a "truth serum" if he decides
to plead not guilty by reason of insanity.
The term used by Judge William Sylvester earlier this week in his court
ruling was that a "narcoanalytic interview" could be employed to determine if
Holmes is genuinely insane.
"The last time I had read that term being used as if the practice had any
validity was decades ago," said Alison Winter, a professor of history of science
and medicine at the University of Chicago who has done extensive research on
"truth serum."
The idea behind this nearly century old tool is not that it forces people to
tell the truth, but that it lowers their inhibitions and presumably makes them
more inclined to talk.
Experts take issue with the technique, but acknowledge the "seductive" nature
of the idea behind it.
Sylvester's court order does not specify what drugs could be used on Holmes,
but it would likely be a drug like sodium amytal or sodium pentothal.
A judge entered a standard
not guilty plea on Holmes' behalf on Tuesday. He is accused of killing 12
and wounding dozens in an Aurora movie theater on July 20, 2012. The option of
not guilty by reason of insanity is still open to Holmes and his attorneys.
"It shall also be permissible to conduct a narcoanalytic interview of you
with such drugs as are medically appropriate, and to subject you to polygraph
examination," Sylvester wrote in the order. The test could be used to help
determine Holmes' mental condition.
Defense attorneys filed a motion opposing the technique, but the judge signed
the order that permits it.
"It's an extraordinarily unusual procedure to use," Dr. Steven Hoge, a
clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University in New York, told
ABCNews.com. "The fact that they've linked it to the use of polygraph makes me
concerned that they do believe that it is indeed a 'truth serum' and there's no
evidence to support that."
Hoge said that are no controlled studies that demonstrate that information
obtained under narcoanalysis is reliable.
"The idea that sodium amytal is a truth serum is not correct," he said. "It's
an invalid belief. It is unproven in its ability to produce reliable information
and it's not a standard procedure used by forensic psychiatrists in the
assessment of the insanity defense, nor is polygraph."
Hoge once administered "truth serum" himself in Massachusetts in the 1980s.
"I've used it once in an attempt to recover memory from a severely
intoxicated man who couldn't recall what he had done while intoxicated," Hoge
said. "It was unsuccessful."
The drug was administered to the inmate in a hospital setting because it can
result in the suppression of breathing, Hoge said. An IV drip was inserted and
sodium amytal was injected into the patient who then answered questions.
Winter said the first "truth serum" was introduced by Robert House, a Texas
doctor who was using it as an obstetric anesthetic during labor around 1915.
He discovered that when the drug administered to women during childbirth was
used at a lower dose--but not low enough for patients to lose
consciousness--people would be in a state where he thought "they wouldn't censor
themselves," Winter said.
"He wasn't thinking of it as an interrogation tool," Winter said. "Lots of
people laughed at him, but there was quite a bit of interest in whether you
could get people to deliver the truth."
Winter said that in the 1920's and 1930's the truth serum became "a kind of
shadowy police tool."
"The results of the supposed truth serum were not admissible in court, but
they were sometimes used as interrogation aids," she said. "There isn't a lot of
documentation of this, but there's enough to see that it was done."
During World War II, the drug was sometimes used as a way of identifying
people who were faking being shell-shocked.
Since then, mentions and use of the drug have been very rare.