Allen, Guy
This text of Allen, Guy (Allen, Guy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
I agree with the Court's holding (ante, at 13) that the appellant did not make at trial the complaint he now raises on appeal about the psychiatrist's evidence.
Since my Sister Johnson has suggested improvements to the questions that are asked of such "experts" when they offer their predictions of the likelihood that defendants will commit criminal acts of violence in the future (post), I shall take this opportunity to suggest a question that may be more important: How have the earlier predictions turned out?
Hundreds of defendants have been convicted of capital murder in trials that required juries to decide such an issue since it was enacted in 1973. In no small number of those trials, "experts" offered their opinions. In every case in which a defendant was convicted of capital murder, he was imprisoned. And it is in prison that a defendant's future conduct will take place, since the only possible sentences are death or imprisonment for life. The records of the capital murderers' conduct after conviction are at the prison. They are public records, I suppose.
Why doesn't somebody ask an expert witness, has he (or any other "expert") bothered to look at the records? If he has, how did the predictions turn out? If no one has looked, why not? Isn't science the careful and systematic study of observations, and tests of the conclusions that are based on the observations?
Filed June 28, 2006.
Do not publish.
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