In re: Cathey (original by judge cochran)
Annotate this CaseApplicant Eric Cathey was convicted of capital murder in 1997 for the kidnapping and shooting death of Cristina Castillo. Applicant received a death sentence. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed his conviction and sentence in 1999, and denied relief on his first application for habeas relief in 2003. The day before his scheduled execution, applicant filed another writ, alleging for the first time that he was mentally retarded and therefore exempt from the death penalty. The Court stayed the execution and issued an order finding that applicant's claim satisfied the requirements of Article 11.071 section 5. The case was remanded to the trial court for a hearing on this new claim. On December 31, 2012, almost two years after the hearing and on the last day of her term of office, the trial judge signed applicant’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. The Court of Criminal Appeals held that applicant did not establish by a preponderance of the evidence, that he was mentally retarded, and therefore he was not exempt from the death penalty. The Court concluded the record did not support the habeas judge’s factual findings or legal conclusions: "[a]lthough we agree that factfinders may 'consider' the concept of the 'Flynn Effect' in assessing the validity of a WAIS or WAIS-R IQ test score, they may consider that effect only in the way that they consider an IQ examiner’s assessment of malingering, depression, lack of concentration, and so forth. It is a generalized consideration that could detract from the over-all validity of the score obtained. The preferred solution to an outdated IQ score is not to start subtracting from that score, it is to retest with a more recently normed IQ test. . . . the trial judge’s finding that [applicant's] 1997 IQ test score was reliable after subtracting ten points was contradicted by the evidence and led to further . . .errors, including an error in the ultimate factual finding that applicant is intellectually disabled under 'Atkins.'"
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