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| Ok, I'll bite. As I recall, Atkins did not adopt a particular definition of MR, a burden of proof, or a procedural mechanism required to litigate an MR claim. Basically, Atkins stands for the proposition that the 8th Amendment prohibits execution of the mentally retarded--you States figure out how to make that happen.
Atkins makes reference to the AAMR and APA definitions, which are the basis for the definition in Health and Saftey Code, I believe. Briseno in turn references that definition.
What else can we do but litigate what our state court has said is the way to litigate this? What parts of Atkins do our courts need to make findings about? |
| Posts: 2138 | Location: McKinney, Texas, USA | Registered: February 15, 2001 |
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| In Atkins, Justice Stevens writing for the majority implicitly sanctioned consideration of the facts of the crime and the defendant's criminal background as they relate to the question of mental retardation. Specifically, the court noted that the mentally retarded often commit crimes impulsively without planning or appreciating the consequences of their actions, are more easily lead in group settings, etc.. The Briseno factors simply expand upon these comments in the Atkins opinion and suggest why those factors are important in assessing a M.R. claim. Ultimately, the factors identified by Justice Cochran in Briseno are relevant to the "adaptive functioning" prong of the Health and Safety Code, AAMR and DSM-IV-TR definitions of M.R. The more evidence that you have that the defendant's level of adaptive functioning is not in the mentally retarded range, the better off you'll be on state or federal habeas review. |
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| I appreciate the idea that relying upon the "additional considerations" in Briseno gives federal courts a way to say, "these are state court factors and they are not binding on us." So, (and I ask this out of sincere curiosity), what is the federal standard? How is it different than Briseno?
[This message was edited by Fresno Bob on 04-05-07 at .] |
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