Member
| I think JB hit the nail on the head, that they'll use something similar to the test whether a jury instruction is required. Remember, though, that just means further developement, not relief.
I think they've also been twisting IQ scores in favor of the defendants. There are rumors that an IQ score of 75 to 70, with or without some hack's affidavit, may be enough due to the margin of error associated with the tests. |
| |
Member
| I'm not sure what standard the CCA is using on the remands. If they are waiting on the Legislature to do something, it looks like they'll have to wait another two years. The Supreme Court did us a real disservice in the Atkins case. Not because they prohibited the execution of the retarded, but because they gave us absolutely no guidance whatsoever as to what definition of retardation should be used, what threshold showing needs to be made in order to properly raise the issue, what procedural mechanism should be used to litigate (judge or jury; pretrial, during trial, or post-trial). This decision was basically a blank check to defense attorneys to assert all sorts of new appellate and habeas claims on retardation while the Supreme Court decides, apparantly on an ad hoc basis, if the states are doing it right. Heaven forbid if a 75 IQ score is all it takes to raise the issue. Don't get me started on IQ scores. It's such an irony that the fields of psychology and education have been moving away from IQ scores for the last couple of decades and now the legal profession, in the context of capital litigation, is apparantly reviving the IQ testing business. Good grief! We need to be very proactive in educating the courts on this complicated issue. As we proved in Johnny Paul Penry's case, mental retardation can and will be faked, especially when one's life depends on it. |
| |