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US Supreme Court Declines Alabama Appeal in Death Row Intellectual Disability Case

US Supreme Court Declines Alabama Appeal in Death Row Intellectual Disability Case Z 560Z2LpDjOw jcAIHcvDqp sNbRNfbGiMKRadfzgt2pFUzqojIMP5J01MdbHzz2 HNDbDIXwZwJ7Ha5zdW6rXzkW3BZL6BLFEY8P9imYN2 XeTn e0CNZ0jUKzJlkzxVkUwbjMNZj6Av0VrEIY7PpoL1MFYSV2CIoW6oPa 1kSjM5kDNDzs ny1jqSOne

US Supreme Court Leaves Lower Court Ruling Intact in Death Penalty Dispute

The U.S. Supreme Court has dismissed Alabama’s latest effort to reinstate the execution of death row inmate Joseph Clifton Smith, bringing a major legal battle over intellectual disability and capital punishment to a close.

The decision allows previous federal court rulings to remain in effect, meaning Smith cannot be executed under existing constitutional protections for individuals found to have intellectual disabilities. The ruling also clears the way for his resentencing and removal from death row.


Court Refuses to Revisit Intellectual Disability Determination

Smith was convicted in Alabama for a 1997 murder and has spent decades on death row. Federal courts previously concluded that he met the legal criteria for intellectual disability after reviewing multiple IQ test results, educational history, and evidence of significant limitations in daily functioning.

His recorded IQ scores ranged from the low 70s to upper 70s. Judges considered not only the test scores but also expert testimony and adaptive functioning evidence before determining that he qualified for constitutional protection from execution.

Alabama officials argued that lower courts used the wrong legal standard and maintained that Smith’s IQ scores did not support a finding of intellectual disability. However, the Supreme Court ultimately declined to overturn the lower court decisions.


Landmark Death Penalty Precedent Remains Central

The case centered on how courts should evaluate intellectual disability claims in death penalty proceedings, particularly when IQ scores fall near commonly recognized thresholds.

A landmark 2002 Supreme Court ruling established that executing individuals with intellectual disabilities violates the U.S. Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Subsequent rulings instructed courts to consider the margin of error in IQ testing and examine broader evidence rather than relying on a strict numerical cutoff.

Lower courts in Smith’s case adopted that broader approach, reviewing the combined impact of multiple test scores alongside evidence of lifelong cognitive and adaptive limitations.


Justices Split Over Broader Legal Questions

While the Supreme Court’s dismissal ends this particular dispute, it leaves unresolved broader questions about how states should assess intellectual disability in capital punishment cases.

Several justices expressed differing views on whether additional guidance is needed for courts handling borderline cases involving IQ testing and disability claims. Because the appeal was dismissed, the Court did not issue a definitive nationwide standard on the issue.

For Smith, however, the outcome is significant. The dismissal preserves the lower court findings, prevents his execution, and moves the case toward a new sentencing phase.

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