ENGLISH Alexander Marcel Andre Sebastian Barker Bailiff @IamSecondComing
I READ HOLY BIBLE KING JAMES VERSION IN FOURTEEN DAYS I READ KORAN THREE TIMES AND THE LORD IS MERCIFUL
I MADE R v BAILIFF BY GIVING A4 AND SPEAKING 14 WORDS.
YOU CAN WRITE TO ME YOU CAN BY SENDING TO MY HOME
144/532 Malabar Road Maroubra NSW 2035 AUSTRALIA YOU TRANSFER MONEY TO BSB 325-185 ACC 03416001 THANKS
R v Alexander Marcel Andre Sebastian Barker Bailiff [2011] ACTSC 214 for not guilty by reason of mental impairment law
seven hundred million people can use worldwide R v BAILIFF
UNITED NATIONS WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION LAW.
The A4 I gave to Associate of Chief Justice Terrence Higgins in R v Alexander Marcel Andre Sebastian Barker Bailiff [2011] ACTSC 214 for not guilty by reason of mental impairment law.
Parker QC, R.W.R., Barrister-at-Law, p.127, Chapter 7, Brain Damage Medico-Legal Aspects, Blackwell Press, Sydney, (1994).
(Philip William Bates Editor-in-Chief Barrister UNSW)
(Sir Anthony Mason Chambers 14/179 Elizabeth St Sydney)
Provide evidence to prove or prove brain damage
6. The clinical picture in focal cerebral palsy
Lishman says on p.16 that severe focal brain damage may be responsible for acute and chronic organic reactions. He says that a frontal injury can bring about characteristic changes in disposition and temperament. Most characteristic is a disinhibition with widespread obscurity, tactlessness, too much talking, childish excitement or humor, and social and ethical control can be diminished with a lack of concern about the future and the consequence of actions. Sexual discretions and minor offenses may occur, or serious misjudgments regarding financial or interpersonal matters. Sometimes there is a clear indifference, even numbness to the feelings of others. Just such a lack of anxiety and insight of the patient in his or her condition. Elevation of the mood is often seen, namely an empty and fatal euphoria rather than a real excitement communicating to the observer. In other cases, the major changes are lack of initiative, aspontaneity, and a profound slowdown in psychomotor activity. Concentration, attention, and the ability to perform a planned activity are impaired by these changes, but the performance on tests of formal intelligence is often surprisingly well preserved once the patient's cooperation is ensured.
References
Lishman, William Alwyn. Organic psychiatry. The psychologist
Consequences of Brain Disorder, Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford, (1987)
International Classifications Disability Disability (1981)
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