`Retarded' murderer may return to death row after raising IQ

Andrew Buncombe
Monday 07 February 2005 01:02 GMT
Comments

A PRISONER, who won a landmark case in which the US Supreme Court ruled that mentally retarded prisoners could not be executed, could find himself back on death row because his IQ has improved as a result of working on his defence.

In an extraordinary reversal of fortune, Daryl Atkins will return to court later this year where a jury will decide whether he is officially retarded. If the court decides he is not, Atkins, 27, could be executed by lethal injection - in effect, because of the work he did that resulted in other mentally retarded prisoners being spared.

When Atkins' IQ was tested in 1998 it was found to stand at 59. But when it was tested more recently, he scored 76. In Virginia, the level at which the state differentiates between someone who is retarded and someone who is not is 70.

A report about Atkins recently completed by Evan Nelson, a psychologist who was hired by the defence, said: "Oddly enough, because of his constant contact with the many lawyers that worked on his case Mr Atkins received more intellectual stimulation in prison than he did during his late adolescence and early adulthood.

"That included practising his reading and writing skills, learning about abstract legal concepts and communicating with professionals."

Defence lawyers argued last week, before a court hearing in Yorktown, that his IQ at the age of 18 - when he committed the crime for which he was sentenced to death - was much lower. It was unfair, they argued, to judge him according to his current mental competence.

Atkins was convicted and sentenced to death for abducting and murdering 21-year-old Eric Nesbitt in 1996. Atkins and another man seized Nesbitt, an airman from Langley Air Force Base, and forced him to withdraw money from a cash machine before shooting him dead. The murder was recorded on closed-curcuit television.

In 2002, the Supreme Court saved Atkins when it ruled 6-3 that the execution of retarded prisoners was unconstitutional because it breached the 8th Amendment which prohibits "cruel and unusual" punishments. Dozens of mentally retarded prisoners were released from death row as a result.

Justice John Paul Stevens wrote at the time: "Because of their disabilities in areas of reasoning, judgement, and control of their impulses - they do not act with the level of moral culpability that characterises the most serious adult criminal conduct. Moreover, their impairments can jeopardise the reliability and fairness of capital proceedings against mentally retarded defendants."

He added: "We are not persuaded the execution of mentally retarded criminals will measurably advance the deterrent or the retributive purpose of the death penalty."

But prosecutors have questioned whether Atkins was ever truly retarded. The state's lawyer, Eileen Addison, said that his ability to load and use a gun, and to recognise a cash machine all proved his competence.

Since 2002, various states across the US have been struggling to interpret the Supreme Court's ruling. According to the Death Penalty Information Centre, most have required defendants to show three things: that their IQ is below 75 or 70, that they lack basic social skills and practical abilities, and that the conditions existed before they turned 18 years of age.

David Gossett, a lawyer who represents a prisoner in Georgia in a similar position to Atkins, said: "Prisons are highly structured environments. They're sometimes good environments for the mentally retarded. These people are not vegetables - they can learn. They are people who can get better at taking tests."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in