Although the U.S. Supreme Court has deter­mined that the intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abiled (men­tal­ly retard­ed) are barred from the death penal­ty, the deci­sion of whether a defen­dant meets this dis­abil­i­ty stan­dard is not made by men­tal health experts but by jurors and judges. A recent study pub­lished in Law & Psychology Review found that jurors expect a much low­er lev­el of intel­lec­tu­al func­tion­ing than men­tal health experts to arrive at a find­ing of dis­abil­i­ty. Moreover, jurors are per­suad­ed away from a dis­abil­i­ty find­ing by state­ments that the defen­dant knew his actions were wrong – even though such knowl­edge should not dis­qual­i­fy some­one from being intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled. The study con­clud­ed that jury pool mem­bers were less like­ly than expe­ri­enced men­tal health work­ers to see severe impair­ments in func­tion­ing as evi­dence” of an intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty. The impli­ca­tion of these find­ings is that fact find­ers are like­ly to fail to iden­ti­fy defen­dants with more mod­er­ate intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ties, even when impair­ments clear­ly meet diag­nos­tic cri­te­ria used by men­tal heath pro­fes­sion­als. Read full study.

(M. Boccaccini, et al., Jury Pool Members’ Beliefs About the Relation Between Potential Impairments in Functioning and Mental Retardation,” 34 Law and Psychology Review 1, 21 (2010)). See Studies on the death penal­ty and Intellectual Disability.

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