By PAUL DAVIES

Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

May 26, 2004; Page B1

In 1993, when 17-year-old Christopher Simmons abduct­ed and mur­dered his neigh­bor, lit­tle did he know that some of the nation’s top brain researchers and psy­chi­a­trists would one day rush to his defense before the Supreme Court.

Emerging sci­en­tif­ic research is shed­ding light on what peo­ple have long sus­pect­ed: The brain changes dra­mat­i­cal­ly dur­ing ado­les­cence and these changes may account for the impul­sive, often irra­tional behav­iors seen in some teenagers.

Now psy­chi­a­trists, lawyers and law­mak­ers are using this emerg­ing sci­ence to argue that such ado­les­cent brain changes should be con­sid­ered as mit­i­gat­ing fac­tors when teenagers are being sen­tenced to the death penalty.

The Supreme Court has agreed to take up the Simmons case this fall to recon­sid­er whether exe­cut­ing peo­ple for crimes com­mit­ted when they were 16 or 17 is cru­el and unusual punishment.”

Although the Supreme Court in 1989 set the min­i­mum age for the death penal­ty at 16, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, the American Psychiatric Association and the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry recent­ly issued state­ments oppos­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment for juve­niles. They plan to file a joint legal brief on Mr. Simmons’s behalf to the Supreme Court. The groups haven’t tak­en a stand on the death penal­ty for adults.

Nineteen states still per­mit exe­cu­tions of con­victs as young as 16; most recent­ly, Sean Sellers of Oklahoma was exe­cut­ed in 1999 at the age of 29 for a mur­der com­mit­ted when he was 16. Nationwide, 73 peo­ple are on death row for crimes they com­mit­ted when they were youths, and 22 have been put to death since the high court rul­ing rein­sti­tut­ed the death penal­ty in 1976. Last year, two peo­ple who com­mit­ted crimes while they were under age 18 were sen­tenced to death.

In 1993, Mr. Simmons and Charles Benjamin, who was 15, broke into a neigh­bor’s home in Fenton, Mo. Once inside they encoun­tered own­er Shirley Ann Crook. Fearing she would rec­og­nize them, they bound Ms. Crook, 46, with duct tape and an elec­tri­cal cord, drove her to a rail­road bridge and shoved her into the Meramec River, where she drowned.

Mr. Benjamin, who was too young to face the death penal­ty, was sen­tenced to life in prison. Mr. Simmons was con­vict­ed of mur­der and sent to death row. He told friends he thought he could get away with the crime because he was a minor, accord­ing to the Missouri attor­ney gen­er­al. Last sum­mer, the Missouri Supreme Court ruled that Mr. Simmons’ death sen­tence vio­lat­ed the U.S. Constitution’s Eighth Amendment against cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment and that Mr. Simmons was too young to be held ful­ly respon­si­ble for his crime.

The legal argu­ment is expect­ed to cen­ter around the what pre­vi­ous Supreme Court rul­ings have called the evolv­ing stan­dard of decen­cy,” or the notion that as a soci­ety matures, so does its notion of what con­sti­tutes cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment. (Congo, Iran, Nigeria and Saudi Arabia are the only oth­er coun­tries with a juve­nile death penalty.)

Part of the argu­ment against juve­nile exe­cu­tions will focus on how devel­op­ing brains in juve­niles dif­fer from adults. Such research helped per­suade law­mak­ers in some states to vote to raise the age for the death penal­ty to 18.

Kids may know the dif­fer­ence between right and wrong, but that does not stop them from doing dumb and dan­ger­ous things that they would nev­er think of doing as adults,” said David Fassler, a child psy­chi­a­trist and pro­fes­sor of psy­chi­a­try at the University of Vermont.

Proponents of this argu­ment con­tend that because the part of the brain that might inhib­it crim­i­nal behav­ior isn’t ful­ly devel­oped, teens lack the abil­i­ty to make sound deci­sions and are more prone to impul­sive behav­ior. They agree the crimes are hor­ri­ble, and those con­vict­ed should be pun­ished, but not be put to death.

The psy­chi­a­trists point to brain research that shows that the frontal lobe, the part of the brain that con­trols rea­son, devel­ops last. Researchers at David Geffin School of Medicine at the University of California at Los Angeles, Harvard Medical School and the National Institute of Mental Health and else­where have con­duct­ed a series of stud­ies in recent years that map” the devel­op­ment of the brain from child­hood to adulthood.

Using mag­net­ic res­o­nance imag­ing, the researchers have been able to scan the brains of chil­dren in dif­fer­ent age groups to com­pile three-dimen­sion­al images that track the brain’s devel­op­ment. They found that the amyg­dala, the more prim­i­tive part of the brain respon­si­ble for impulse and emo­tion, con­trols deci­sion-mak­ing into early adulthood.

The researchers found that a small area in the frontal lobe of the brain — known as the pre­frontal cor­tex — con­trols the most advanced func­tions of the brain and is the last part to devel­op. The pre­frontal cor­tex is locat­ed just behind the fore­head and is known as the CEO” of the body, because it allows humans to plan, antic­i­pate con­se­quences, con­trol impuls­es, pri­or­i­tize thoughts and think in the abstract. This part of the brain con­tin­ues to devel­op for indi­vid­u­als into their 20s.

So far, the researchers haven’t demon­strat­ed a direct link between brain devel­op­ment and behav­ior, and death-penal­ty advo­cates are chal­leng­ing what research already exists.

There is sci­ence, and then there is junk sci­ence,” said Dianne Clements, pres­i­dent of Justice for All, a Houston non­prof­it vic­tim-advo­ca­cy group. This is an effort by those in the sci­en­tif­ic com­mu­ni­ty who oppose the death penal­ty to use sci­ence to argue their position.”

Ms. Clements said case facts show teens who kill real­ize their actions were wrong because they often try to cov­er up and destroy evi­dence to avoid get­ting caught. What’s more, most rel­a­tives of mur­der vic­tims don’t think a killer’s age at the time of the crime should result in a less­er sen­tence, she said.

But some law­mak­ers think a crim­i­nal’s age should be tak­en into account. It’s just intu­itive,” said Cale Case, a Wyoming Republican state sen­a­tor who co-spon­sored a bill that raised the min­i­mum age for the state’s death penal­ty to 18. I had two teen-age daugh­ters, and one was very com­pul­sive. But they have become very responsible adults.”

Stephen Harper, an assis­tant pub­lic defend­er in Miami who has rep­re­sent­ed juve­niles fac­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, also notes sci­ence is often ahead of the law. He point­ed out how the courts were slow to embrace the use of DNA evi­dence link­ing indi­vid­u­als to crimes.

If you just focus on how hor­ri­ble the crime was, a lot of peo­ple do not care how old the offend­er was,” Mr. Harper said. But the brain research begins to demon­strate that ado­les­cents are less cul­pa­ble than adults.”

Nevertheless, some sci­en­tists say the research isn’t com­plete. I don’t think it is there yet, but we are work­ing on it,” said Elizabeth Sowell, a pro­fes­sor of neu­rol­o­gy at UCLA. I think what we have found is rel­e­vant and the court may want to con­sid­er it. But there is no absolute proof. I think the sci­en­tists who say the evi­dence to date should be used to end the death penal­ty [for juve­niles] may be going out on a limb.”