"'Dr. Death' Agrees to Stop Evaluating Mentally Disabled Texas Death Row Prisoners," is the Democracy Now segment, today. You can watch the video at the link.
Last Friday, Texas reprimanded a psychologist who used what critics say were unscientific methods to examine at least 25 Texas death row prisoners for intellectual disabilities, two of whom were later executed. Dr. George Denkowski was the go-to psychologist for prosecutors who wanted to prove defendants were not mentally handicapped—and therefore eligible for the death penalty. Democracy Now! first covered Dr. Denkowksi in January 2010 in a video report by Renée Feltz that accompanied her story for The Texas Observer magazine. For an update, we’re joined by Texas Defender Service attorney, Kathryn Kase, and by Dr. Jerome Brown, the psychologist filed the complaint that ultimately resulted in Denkowksi’s agreement to stop evaluating people in criminal cases.
The participants include:
Kathryn Kase, attorney with the Texas Defender Service. Dr. George Denkowski said her client, Daniel Plata, was eligible for execution but a judge later said the evaluation was full of "fatal errors" and commuted Plata’s death sentence to life.
Dr. Jerome Brown, a clinical psychologist who worked as an expert for the defense on five death penalty cases in which Denkowski worked for the prosecution. He filed the complaint that ultimately led Denkowksi to stop evaluating people in criminal cases.
Renee Feltz, new Democracy Now! producer. Her exposé of Dr. Denkowski for The Texas Observer magazine, supported by The Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute, was a finalist for a 2010 Investigative Reporters and Editors Award.
Earlier coverage of the Denkowski sanction begins at the link. Renee Feltz' earlier reporting, noted above, is at the link.
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