144
The number of individuals who have had their death sentences vacated due to intellectual disabilities since 2002.
120/144
83% of those whose sentences were vacated were people of color.
Overview
The question of a national ban on the use of capital punishment for those with intellectual disability was initially rejected by the United States Supreme Court in 1989, in part because at that time only a few states had adopted legislation that protected this vulnerable group of people from the death penalty. The Court found insufficient evidence that society disapproved of the practice. But just 13 years later, there was a new consensus. Thirty states had either ended the use of the death penalty entirely, or had specifically exempted people with intellectual disabilities. In Atkins v. Virginia (2002), the Court held that was evidence that society no longer supported the execution of people with intellectual disability. The Court also noted the special vulnerabilities of people in this group, including the risk that they would falsely confess, and concluded that the traditional justification of deterrence for this group was not applicable.
At Issue
The Atkins case was a seminal moment in the history of the death penalty, not only because it had the potential to spare the lives of many vulnerable defendants, but also because the Court’s rationale provided a blueprint for achieving other limitations on its use. But the Court left the critical decision of determining who had intellectual disability to each state — leading to a patchwork of inconsistent laws and practices that left some people without the protection they deserved.
What DPIC Offers
DPIC traces the history of this important ruling, noting the legislative efforts in various states and pivotal cases. It provides access to research regarding how many defendants have been found to have intellectual disability and removed from death row, and how states have complied with this ruling.
News & Developments
News
May 12, 2026
Will a Person with Intellectual Disability Become Texas’ 600th Execution in the Modern Era?
On Friday, May 8, 2026, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit temporarily stayed the execution of Edward Busby, who had been scheduled to be executed in Texas on May 14, 2026. Mr. Busby is a person whom all experts agree has intellectual disability, and he is therefore legally ineligible for execution. Despite this, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has asked the United States Supreme Court to lift the stay, and if that…
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Apr 20, 2026
Texas Death Sentence Vacated for Mentally Ill and Intellectually Disabled Man After Half-Century on Death Row — And Nearly 40 Years Without a Lawyer
By the time 21-year-old Clarence Curtis Jordan shot a man during a grocery store burglary in 1977, he had been struggling for most of his life with hallucinations and intellectual deficits. His IQ score placed him in the bottom 0.5% of the population. He identified the president as“John Hill” and said he often saw“old, weird, burnt-up looking people” watching him. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) found him incompetent to be executed in 1988. But Mr.
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Jan 07, 2026
New Report Examines Florida’s Unprecedented Execution Pace and Trends in 2025
The United States carried out 47 executions in 2025, and Florida carried out 19 — the highest number in state history and more than double its previous modern record, according to a year-end report from Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty (FADP). Executions in Florida — which averaged one execution every 16 days from February 2025 through December 2025 — accounted for 40% of the 47 executions nationwide, making Florida a clear outlier in the use of the death…
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Sep 16, 2025
Two Scheduled Executions of People with Intellectual Disability in Florida Raise Serious Concerns
The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2002 decision in Atkins v. Virginia established that the Eighth Amendment prohibits executing people with intellectual disability. The Court later clarified that rigid IQ cutoffs were not permissible and also required states to consider meaningful evidence of intellectual disability, including scientifically valid expert testimony and adaptive functioning deficits. Despite this unequivocal constitutional protection,…
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Aug 28, 2025
Kentucky Governor Cites Constitutional Concerns with Execution Protocol and Drug Acquisition Issues in Refusal to Set Execution Date
This week we are featuring some articles from the first part of 2025 that we think are worth another look. We’ll be back with new articles next week. This article originally ran on February 11, 2025. In June 2025, Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman requested that Governor Andy Beshear set an execution date for death row prisoner Ralph Baze. In a late June 2025 reply, Gov. Beshear declined to do so because of an April 2025 Franklin County Circuit Court ruling that…
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