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State Bar of Michigan
Volume
2, Issue 2, March 2006
Committee on Justice Initiatives and Equal Access Initiative Disabilities
Project
Disabilities Project Newsletter
Representing the Cognitively Disabled
Client in a Criminal Case
by
Jeanice Dagher-Margosian
The purpose of this article is to discuss some of the characteristics
of this population of offenders and to encourage further consideration
of options in preparing these cases. It is an edited version of a lengthier
advocacy piece presented by the author at the State Bar of Michigan Annual
Meeting in September of 2005. That article, with extensive supporting
authority, can be viewed online.
Introduction
A recent United States Supreme Court decision provides a new context
for lawyers as they prepare and defend criminal cases to consider the
circumstances of developmentally disabled. Cognitively impaired defendants
offer a special set of circumstances for the lawyers representing them.
Although they are not always easily recognized as disadvantaged, developmentally
disabled people are more likely than the general population to be arrested,
convicted, sentenced to prison, and victimized while there. They are
frequently used by other criminals to assist in crimes, without understanding
their involvement or the consequences. They may be bullied into participating
in crimes. They may also have a deep need to be accepted and may agree
to participate in crimes in order to gain friendship.
The United States Supreme Court held in Atkins v Virginia,
536 US 304 (2002), that execution of mentally retarded criminal defendants
is excessive and constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. The Court
observed that defendants who are mentally retarded – meaning that
they have low IQs and limited in adaptive skills – may be able
to distinguish between right and wrong, and may indeed be competent to
stand trial. They may still, however, be unable to learn from experience,
engage in logical reasoning, control impulse, or understand the reactions
of others to their behavior. Given these limitations, it is cruel and
unconstitutional to impose the death penalty on such individuals; it
is not a proportionate penalty because their culpability for the same
acts as high-functioning individuals is lessened. The Atkins decision
serves as a catalyst to examine the challenges presented by cognitively
impaired criminal defendants.
Characteristics
A developmental disability is a condition diagnosed in childhood or
adolescence. Disabilities include mental retardation or related conditions
like cerebral palsy, epilepsy, autism, or other neurological conditions
that result in impairment of general intellectual functioning or adaptive
behaviors. Fetal alcohol syndrome, attention deficit disorder, and autism
are also diagnosed in developmental disabilities. These conditions and
functional limitations are measured by a qualified professional using
clinical observation and intelligence, competency, and adaptive skills
testing.
Developmentally disabled and retarded people are impaired in one or
more spheres of mental functioning that involve perceptual, memory, and
judgment modalities. Their ability to process and retain information
is affected. They are frequently unable to reason abstractly. Memory
and the ability to relate cause and effect is often impaired. Verbal
skills are affected, although many individuals sound and appear to function
at a higher cognitive level than they actually do. Adaptive functions
and social interaction may be impaired, with the age level of social
functioning being much younger than the chronological age of the client.
Relevance to Criminal Defense and Special Problems
Mental deficits put this population at high risk
of involvement with the criminal justice system, with research showing
that up to 24 percent of this country’s prison population is
mentally retarded. Special problems faced by this population include
an unwillingness to have their disability recognized, a lack of understanding
of their rights, difficulty understanding commands, agitation at being
detained, a desire to please their questioners, difficulty describing
details, and tendency to confess despite innocence.
Special defense concerns for developmentally disabled defendants include
their arrest and interrogation, legal competency to waive rights, mitigation
of charges, and sentencing. These topics are discussed below.
Arrest and Interrogation
False admissions and confessions are frequent in
these cases. Individuals are often interviewed by police without having
an attorney present. In order to gain approval or hide their disability,
individuals with mental retardation usually answer affirmatively when
asked if they understand and waive their rights, even when they do
not understand. Courts frequently uphold the waiver as valid even when
it is challenged on the basis of a client’s lack of understanding
because all that must be shown is that the warnings were given and
that the defendant answered police questions after being given the
warnings. This is not a difficult standard for the state to meet.
It is uncertain whether mentally retarded individuals understand
their Miranda rights and what it means to waive them. If a person does
not understand these rights, the same person cannot understand the consequences
of abandoning their protections. Accordingly, Miranda rights cannot be
voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently waived. See Johnson v Zerbst,
304 US 458 (1938). Other problems include the communication abilities
of those with cognitive impairments, who often give responses that are
misunderstood by police officers and may be untrue. In many cases, answers
are obtained by suggestion, leading questions, and confusion by investigators.
The confession is often not a recounting of events, but rather mere repetition
of statements made by the officer to the suspect. Because memory is impaired
or nonexistent in many retarded people, and because they typically try
to please those in an authoritative position, they may agree that something
may have happened "because you say it did." Accordingly, retarded
defendants are vulnerable to suggestibility in a way that normal-functioning
defendants are not. At a minimum, retarded individuals should have a
support person, ideally a parent or guardian, with them when they are
interviewed. If representation is obtained early enough, no discussion
with police will be permitted without counsel.
At a suppression hearing, expert opinion may be presented
to explain the mental limitations and functioning of a client that
caused the situation. Limitations on verbal and reading ability, trust
of authority, and inability to remember events should be explained
by an expert witness. If a client has no ability to accurately remember
events, it undercuts the reliability of a confession. Similarly, if
he has no ability to comprehend the abstract, future-based components
of the Miranda warnings, whether he or she had them or was in custody
when they were given is irrelevant.
Competency
Criminal defendants may not be tried and may not waive their right to
counsel or to trial unless they are competent to do so. Competency requires
that a defendant be able to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable
degree of understanding in order to assist in his own defense, and that
the defendant has a rational and factual understanding of the events
taking place against him. A competency evaluation should be considered
as early in the process as possible.
Mitigation of Charges
Most crimes committed by mentally retarded individuals are not premeditated
or well-planned. Attorneys should consider arguing that the defendant
lacks ability to plan the crime or to form intent. To support these arguments,
the evaluator’s opinion should include an explanation of why the
defendant was unable to form the specific intent required for the crime
as charged; it may not be inferred.
Sentencing
A defense that fully explains the defendant’s limited mental functioning
presents the opportunity to argue for mitigation upon sentencing. Intellectually
limited defendants might not benefit from prison, might not be rehabilitated
in the process, and may in fact learn and repeat the violent behavior
they will be exposed to in prison. A better choice may be to allow them
to remain in the community within a strictly supervised probation program,
including mental health services if appropriate.
Identifying Clients
Many persons affected by mental retardation are mildly affected. They
are not conspicuously disabled and have IQs of between 50 and 70. Moderately
retarded individuals generally have IQs of between 35 and 55. These two
groups comprise the majority of those who come into the criminal justice
system. Mildly retarded people often do not want their disability "found
out" and mask symptoms to appear to be capable of higher functioning
than they actually are. Because many retarded individuals appear to have
higher mental functioning than they actually do, an attorney may not
easily recognize a client's disability during interviews.
Attorneys must look to unspoken sources of information to identify
mental disability. A client’s demeanor and presentation are indicative
of intellectual ability, as is his or her social history.
Watch your client
When interviewing your client for the first time, look closely at his
or her demeanor and mannerisms. Long sentences may pose comprehension
problems, due to both memory limitations and problems with abstract language.
Additionally, the client's demeanor and body language should be closely
observed. Repetitive motions such as rocking, pinching or rubbing a point
on the body, or looking away or around the room, can indicate perceptual
abnormalities. If your client is unusually compliant it may be an indication
of the extraordinarily trusting nature of mentally retarded individuals,
including those with fetal alcohol syndrome.
Background
Are your client’s parents developmentally disabled?
Do his school records show placement in special education or difficulty
with classes? Do teachers, relatives, and friends report unusual behavior
with respect to concrete thinking and speaking? When interviewing your
client, ask about these things to determine whether further testing is
needed. It is also helpful to look at labels attached to your client
by others to determine whether there is a need for further assessment.
Clients may be referred to as "slow" or "child-like," which
may indicate that functioning is below average.
Does your client have difficulty reasoning abstractly or projecting into
the future? Mild retardation is often characterized by thought that
is limited to very concrete concepts. How does your client perform routine
motor tasks, such as holding a pencil and writing by hand? Subtle differences
in these activities may well indicate further assessment is necessary.
This can be accomplished by a retained expert or a court-appointed
professional pursuant to motion.
Tasks
Can your client remember simple information, such as phone numbers and
addresses? Although many individuals can function normally in adaptive
activities like riding the bus, holding a job, or driving a car, their
memory functions may be well below normal adult levels. In one case,
an individual appeared quite normal, even serving in the National Guard
for a time. However, when mental retardation was suspected, a review
of his social and military history revealed malfunction in tasks requiring
normal memory. His military history also showed that he was AWOL over
nine times. This was consistent with his social history, which showed
that he could not hold a job because he could not get there on time.
He regularly got lost while walking in familiar areas. His wife filled
out job applications and handled finances. When viewed together, these
are all indicators of mild retardation. This was later verified by psychological
testing.
Conclusion
An assessment by a mental health professional qualified in diagnosis
of developmental disability is a necessity in a case involving an intellectually
impaired client. This is because there is still a misapprehension that
intellectually disabled citizens are defined by a total incapacity to
care from themselves or carry on regular daily activities. What is important
to show a court is that intellectually disabled people are not incapable
of such activities, but that their mental processes are different. Understanding
concepts requires that they be explained in graphic, concrete terms.
If a non-native English speaker is a suspect in a criminal case,
it is clear that advice of rights must be given in his or her native
language, and the trial must be translated throughout. No less is required
for those that operate within the world on limited cognitive abilities.
Jeanice Dagher-Margosian is an appellate criminal defense attorney
with a special interest in state of mind defense and mental function
as if affects the representation of criminal defendants.
Previous issues of Disabilities Project Newsletter:
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