Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Court puts Kansan back on death row

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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday restored a death sentence for a Kansas murderer who claimed his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion had been violated when he was forced to submit to a mental-health exam after claiming he was under the influence of drugs when he shot a sheriff.

In a 9-0 decision written by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the court ruled that if a defendant claims he was “intoxicate­d” at the time of the crime, the prosecutor may require an exam by a mental-health expert and then release the findings to a jury.

The Fifth Amendment does not allow defendants to present a “one-sided and potentiall­y inaccurate view of his mental state at the time of the crime,” Sotomayor wrote.

Sotomayor said that even if a defendant does not testify directly about his mental state, he opens the door to being required to respond to questions once he relies on his mental state or his intoxicati­on as a defense. The decision reverses a ruling of the Kansas Supreme Court, which had overturned the death sentence imposed on Scott Cheever. In 2005, he shot and killed a sheriff who had gone to his home to arrest him on an outstandin­g warrant.

In his defense, he claimed that he was impaired by his use of methamphet­amines and therefore could not be convicted of premeditat­ed murder.

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