Current:Home > MarketsTexas death row inmate with 40-year mental illness history ruled not competent to be executed -Elevate Money Guide
Texas death row inmate with 40-year mental illness history ruled not competent to be executed
View
Date:2025-04-18 17:38:53
HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas death row inmate with a long history of mental illness, and who tried to call Jesus Christ and John F. Kennedy as trial witnesses, is not competent to be executed, a federal judge ruled.
Scott Panetti, 65, who has been on death row for nearly 30 years for fatally shooting his in-laws in front of his wife and young children, has contended that Texas wants to execute him to cover up incest, corruption, sexual abuse and drug trafficking he has uncovered. He has also claimed the devil has “blinded” Texas and is using the state to kill him to stop him from preaching and “saving souls.”
In a ruling issued Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman in Austin said Panetti’s well-documented mental illness and disorganized thought prevent him from understanding the reason for his execution.
The U.S. Supreme Court has prohibited the death penalty for the intellectually disabled, but not for people with serious mental illness. However, it has ruled that a person must be competent to be executed.
“There are several reasons for prohibiting the execution of the insane, including the questionable retributive value of executing an individual so wracked by mental illness that he cannot comprehend the ‘meaning and purpose of the punishment,’ as well as society’s intuition that such an execution ‘simply offends humanity.’ Scott Panetti is one of these individuals,” Pitman wrote in his 24-page ruling.
Panetti’s lawyers have long argued that his 40-year documented history of severe mental illness, including paranoid and grandiose delusions and audio hallucinations, prevents him from being executed.
Gregory Wiercioch, one of Panetti’s attorneys, said Pitman’s ruling “prevents the state of Texas from exacting vengeance on a person who suffers from a pervasive, severe form of schizophrenia that causes him to inaccurately perceive the world around him.”
“His symptoms of psychosis interfere with his ability to rationally understand the connection between his crime and his execution. For that reason, executing him would not serve the retributive goal of capital punishment and would simply be a miserable spectacle,” Wiercioch said in a statement.
The Texas Attorney General’s Office, which argued during a three-day hearing in October that Panetti was competent for execution, did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment on Pitman’s ruling. Panetti has had two prior execution dates — in 2004 and 2014.
In 1986, the Supreme Court ruled the Eighth Amendment bars the execution of mentally ill individuals who do not have a factual understanding of their punishment. In 2007, in a ruling on an appeal in Panetti’s case, the high court added that a mentally ill person must also have a rational understanding of why they are being executed.
At the October hearing, Timothy Proctor, a forensic psychologist and an expert for the state, testified that while he thinks Panetti is “genuinely mentally ill,” he believes Panetti has both a factual and rational understanding of why he is to be executed.
Panetti was condemned for the September 1992 slayings of his estranged wife’s parents, Joe Alvarado, 55, and Amanda Alvarado, 56, at their Fredericksburg home in the Texas Hill Country.
Despite being diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1978 and hospitalized more than a dozen times for treatment in the decades before the deadly shooting, Panetti was allowed by a judge to serve as his own attorney at his 1995 trial. At his trial, Panetti wore a purple cowboy outfit, flipped a coin to select a juror and insisted only an insane person could prove insanity.
___
Follow Juan A. Lozano on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter: https://twitter.com/juanlozano70
veryGood! (62)
Related
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Russian-American journalist charged in Russia with failing to register as a foreign agent
- Burt Young, Oscar-nominated actor who played Paulie in ‘Rocky’ films, dies at 83
- John Legend says he wants to keep his family protected with updated COVID vaccine
- Sam Taylor
- Joran van der Sloot’s confession in Natalee Holloway case provides long-sought answers, mother says
- Billie Eilish Unveils Massive New Back Tattoo
- Musician Mike Skinner turns actor and director with ‘The Darker the Shadow, the Brighter the Light’
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Michigan Gov. Whitmer's office reports breach of summer home
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Jim Jordan lost a second House speaker vote. Here's what happens next.
- Armed robbers target Tigers’ Dominican complex in latest robbery of MLB facility in the country
- 1 killed, 2 others flown to hospital after house explosion in rural South Dakota
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Havana’s once stately homes crumble as their residents live in fear of an imminent collapse
- Simu Liu Reveals His Parents Accidentally Took His Recreational Drugs While House Sitting
- Press freedom group says Taliban court has freed a French-Afghan journalist held for 284 days
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
World Food Program appeals for $19 million to provide emergency food in quake-hit Afghanistan
5 Things podcast: Biden arrives in Israel after Gaza hospital blast, still no Speaker
Oyster outrage: Woman's date sneaks out after she eats 48 oysters in viral TikTok video
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Workers noticed beam hanging off railcar days before fatal accident but didn’t tell the railroad
Chicago’s top cop says using police stations as short-term migrant housing is burden for department
NFL Week 7 odds: Moneylines, point spreads, over/under