Congressional Digest

Supreme Court Debates March 2019 No. 3 Vol. 22
The Death Penalty for Mentally Impaired Offenders

Dementia and the Death Penalty

Executing Inmates With Diminished Capacity

Buy Complete Issue$19.95

The Death Penalty for Mentally Impaired Offenders

The Supreme Court Interprets “Cruel and Unusual Punishment”

n 1986, the Supreme Court in Ford v. Wainwright held that it was unlawful to execute the mentally insane. However, the Court did not set out or propose any guidelines or standards for the State legislative bodies to adopt or follow for the determination of whether one should be adjudged insane. As a result, problems developed because there was no implementation of a uniform measure to protect the insane from the death penalty. The Penry Precedent On the same day the Court decided Stanford v. Kentucky (1989) it also decided Penry v. Lynaugh (1989), a case in which the Petitioner,…

More on Dementia and the Death Penalty:

Back to top ↑
X
Username
Password

Email Address
Email Address Again
Forgot username/password?