Gonzales, Ernesto
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Opinion
Today we confront the following question: Must a trial judge conduct a competency hearing on his own initiative after hearing evidence that, due to alcohol or drug abuse, the defendant suffered amnesia with respect to events giving rise to the charged offense? We answer that question, "No."
I. BACKGROUND
Appellant shot and killed a friend at a graduation party. Both appellant and his friend were intoxicated at the time. Appellant was found guilty of murdering his friend. At the punishment stage of trial, appellant presented evidence that, due to alcohol and drug abuse, he suffers from primary amnesia or blackouts, and, as a result, he could not recall the incident. The jury assessed punishment at life imprisonment, and appellant appealed. The court of appeals affirmed the judgment, holding, "The mere fact that, due to his alcohol and drug abuse, [appellant] could not remember the actual shooting, did not raise a bona fide doubt in the trial judge sufficient to order a competency hearing." (1)
II. ANALYSIS
An inquiry into competency must be conducted when there is evidence "sufficient to raise a bona fide doubt in the mind of the judge whether the defendant is legally competent." (2) "A bona fide doubt may exist if the defendant exhibits truly bizarre behavior or has a recent history of severe mental illness or at least moderate mental retardation." (3) This list does not explicitly include amnesia or intoxication, and we recently observed, in Morris v. State, that "no case yet reported . . . has held that the inability to recall the event charged because of amnesia constitutes mental incapacity to stand trial." (4)
In Morris, we gave three reasons for holding that amnesia does not per se render a defendant incompetent to stand trial: (1) amnesia is akin to "missing" evidence, (2) a contrary rule "would unduly hamper the State's interest in the prosecution of violators of its criminal laws and jeopardize the safety and security of other citizens," and (3) amnesia can be easily feigned. (5) The first reason we gave suggests that amnesia, by itself, should not even raise the issue of incompetency, because the amnesiac is really in no different position than many other defendants who lack a recollection of the events surrounding the charged offense:
In his plight, the amnesiac differs very little from an accused who was home alone, asleep in bed, at the time of the crime or from a defendant whose only witnesses die or disappear before trial. Furthermore, courts, of necessity, must decide guilt or innocence on the basis of available facts even where those facts are known to be incomplete, and the amnesiac's loss of memory differs only in degree from that experienced by every defendant, witness, attorney, judge, and venireman. How much worse off is a generally amnesic defendant on trial for murder, for example, than one who remembers all but the dispositive fact: who struck the first blow? (6)
Though we did not "discount the possibility that there might one day be an extraordinary case in which an inability to recall the charged event because of amnesia could constitute mental incapacity to stand trial," (7) our reference to such a case being "extraordinary" suggests that such a case would be extremely rare, if it could happen at all. It is worth noting that we did not hold that such an extraordinary situation could ever exist--we simply declined to discount the possibility.
The present case is not even remotely extraordinary. Unfortunately, crimes are often committed by people who are severely intoxicated. And the fact that a defendant was too drunk at the time of the incident to remember what happened is one of the paradigm examples used to support the legal proposition that amnesia alone does not render an individual incompetent to stand trial. (8) We recognized in Morris that the competency question assesses "the defendant's mental condition at the time of trial." (9) The competency standard requires that the defendant have "a sufficient present ability to consult with the lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding" and "a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him." (10) If an extraordinary situation involving amnesia does exist, it would have to be where the amnesia compromises a defendant's ability to think rationally. (11) That is not the claim here, nor is it the case. Appellant's asserted present inability to remember the events surrounding the murder does not impair his rational thought process and therefore does not render him incompetent.
We affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
Delivered: June 16, 2010
Publish
1. Gonzales v. State, No. 13-07-251-CR, slip op. at 7 (Tex. App.-Corpus Christi August 28,
2008) (not designated for publication).
2. Montoya v. State, 291 S.W.3d 420, 424 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
4. 301 S.W.3d 281, 292 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009).
5. Id. at 292-93.
6. Id. at 293 (quoting Comment, Amnesia: a Case Study in the Limits of Particular Justice,
71 Yale L.J. 109, 128 (1961)).
7. Id. at 293.
8. See United States v. Stevens, 461 F.2d 317, 320-21 (7th Cir. 1972) (discussing alcoholism-induced amnesia addressed in United States v. Sullivan, 406 F.2d 180 (2d Cir. 1969)); Wilson v.
United States, 391 F.2d 460, 465 (D.C. Cir. 1968) (Leventhal, J., concurring)(saying a defendant
who suffers amnesia due to injury is not significantly different "from a defendant who was so
intoxicated that he 'passed out on his feet' at the crucial time, and does not now have the slightest
recollection with which he can give his counsel any help as to what he was doing at that critical
time"); State v. McClendon, 103 Ariz., 105, 108, 437 P.2d 421, 424 (quoting 3. Id. at 425.
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