"Inmate's Rising I.Q. Score Could Mean His Death" reports the NYT:
Three         years ago, in the case of a Virginia man named Daryl R. Atkins, the         United States Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional to         execute the mentally retarded. But Mr. Atkins's recent test scores could         eliminate him from that group.
        
His         scores have shot up, a defense expert said, thanks to the mental workout         his participation in years of litigation gave him. The Supreme Court,         which did not decide whether Mr. Atkins was retarded, noted that he         scored 59 on an I.Q. test in 1998. The cutoff for retardation in         Virginia is 70.
        
A defense expert who retested Mr. Atkins last year found that his I.Q. was 74. In court here on Thursday, prosecutors said their expert's latest test yielded 76.
From my 2002 article "IQ Defenders Feel Vindicated by Supreme Court" on the Supreme Court's Atkins decision:
"One intelligence expert worried that we will end up executing only those killers 'too stupid to realize that they ought to flunk their IQ test.'
 
 
 
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