Paul Campos

  • August 2, 2012

    by Jeremy Leaming

    In summer 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that it is unconstitutional for states to execute mentally disabled people. But its opinion in Atkins v. Virginia has failed to take hold in Texas, a state that as University of Colorado law school professor Paul Campos puts it “likes killing people, and it’s not terribly particular about whom it kills.”

    Campos is not kidding. The state under its current governor, Rick Perry (pictured), leads the way in killing people, far outpacing other death penalty states. And as Campos highlights the state has found a way to circumvent Supreme Court precedent and not only kill mentally disabled inmates, but people “represented by frighteningly incompetent lawyers, and almost certainly innocent.”

    Recently the Supreme Court declined to intervene and stop Texas from executing Yokamon Hearn, who suffered from brain damage and was poorly represented at trial. The Texas Defender Service had fought to stop the execution of the mentally disabled Hearn.

    The state is on the verge of executing yet another mentally disabled man, Marvin Wilson. Wilson’s attorney Lee Kovarsky, an assistant professor of law at the University of Maryland, has urged the Supreme Court to intervene to stop the execution set for Aug. 7. Wilson was convicted of allegedly killing a drug informant, but Kovarsky’s petition for a writ of certiorari casts serious doubt on that.

    Citing Atkins, Wilson’s attorney notes that Donald Trahan, a neuropsychologist appointed by the court to examine Wilson, diagnosed him as suffering “mental retardation.” Wilson, Kovarsky continues, “received a 61 on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale …, recognized as the gold standard of intellectual assessment. The evaluation places Wilson well below the “first percentile of human intelligence.”

    As Campos noted Wilson has the “mental development of the average first-grader.” But, Campos continued, the “most shocking aspect of this case is that the state of Texas has never even bothered to present any evidence contesting” Wilson’s diagnosis.

    Instead Texas has been able, thanks to the ultraconservative U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, to apply its own standards in determining whether a death row inmate is mentally disabled. Texas’ factors for determining whether a person is mentally disabled are not recognized by the American Association on Intellectual and Development Disabilities. Kovarsky writes that the factors Texas employs to determine mental illness “lack any scientific foundation, violate the basic diagnostic principle that adaptive strengths and limitations coexist ….”

  • June 26, 2012

    by Jeremy Leaming

    For what seems like decades a conventional wisdom, built largely by a handful of Supreme Court correspondents, has held that Justice Antonin Scalia is the high court’s most brilliant, disciplined, albeit ideological, member. He is also, according to this conventional wisdom, deliciously witty.  

    But thankfully, the Web has altered the narrative by giving forums to an array of writers who have been quick to poke holes in an increasingly tiresome and shoddy line of reporting. (It should be noted, however, that longtime Supreme Court correspondent Linda Greenhouse is not among the gaggle that built the fawning picture of a straight-shooting justice with a jolly wit. Indeed Greenhouse has taken Scalia’s sloppy work to task on numerous occasions.)

    Moreover the aging Scalia is simply not helping to advance the conventional wisdom. Though in fairness, he hardly seems concerned with what reporters, bloggers think or write about him. His constituency is made up of right-wing politicos and activists. He’s the Koch brothers’ justice.

    With each passing high court term, Scalia seems to becoming wackier, more out-of-touch, increasingly shrill. And he’s being called out for his nuttiness with growing frequency.

    In a piece for Salon, Paul Campos, for instance, is not mincing words about the tottering justice. Scalia, Campos writes, “has in his old age become an increasingly intolerant and intolerable blowhard: a pompous celebrant of his own virtue and rectitude, a purveyor of intemperate jeremiads against the degeneracy of the age, and now an author of hysterical diatribes against foreign invaders, who threaten all that is holy.”

    Campos was referring to Scalia’s concurring, dissenting opinion issued in Arizona v. U.S. where a majority of the justices invalidated three provisions, and weakened a fourth, of Arizona’s harsh anti-immigrant law. In his opinion Scalia not only railed against alleged dangers undocumented persons pose to Arizona, but also ruminated about state sovereignty and took a shot at President Obama’s actions on immigration policy.