Thursday, May 21, 2026

Breaking legal and research news: SCOTUS (US Supreme Court) decision re multiple IQ scores in intellectual disability (ID) death penalty case (Hamm v Smith) - A DIG decision upholding the lower court decision

Today SCOTUS ruled on the Hamm v Smith multiple IQ score Atkins intellectual disability (ID) case that was argued before SCOTUS last December. This important decision, with all concurring and dissenting opinions, is available here.  Interested parties should read all the opinions. 

All documents and the history of the case can be found in a prior IQs Corner post.  As noted in the prior lengthy post, APA submitted an Amicus brief that, based on the reading of some of the justices opinions, suggests it (together with a AAIDD Amicus Brief) played an important role in the decision.




Briefly, when SCOTUS dismisses the writ of certiorari as improvidently granted it means the justices recognized that they made a mistake in agreeing to hear the case and decided to dismiss it without issuing a ruling on the merits. In legal shorthand, this is often referred to as a "DIG" (Dismissed as Improvidently Granted). This typically happens after the Court has accepted the case, reviewed the briefs, and sometimes even heard oral arguments. 

In practice, this means that the lower court decision—which is consistent with APA’s Amicus brief—that argued that multiple IQ scores should be viewed holistically  augmented by clinical judgement—stands. This means Mr. Smith will not be executed and, more importantly, the ruling does not upset the status of prior Atkins case law.  Given the recent direction and flavor of SCOTUS, there was a fear that SCOTUS might render a formal decision that would set back prior SCOTUS Atkins ID decisions.  So, this is a win for maintaining the principles of clinical judgement, the opinions and standards established by the established medical communities (both APA’s, AAIDD), and the need for a holistic approach to the interpretation of multiple IQ scores together with adaptive behavior.

A reading of the concurring opinions indicates that APA’s brief, as well as several key APA and AAIDD ID-related publications referenced in their decisions, were influential in the decision.  Several of the dissenting opinions reveal some troubling thinking by several justices. 
As a potential conflict of interest (COI) notice, I (Dr. Kevin McGrew), together with Dr. Joel Schneider and Dr. Cecil Reynolds (as noted on page three the APA amicus brief), were consultants to APA in the drafting of that brief.
It should be noted that as a result of the work of APA Amicus brief working committee, a peer-reviewed paper outlining a psychometrically sound approach (developed by Dr. Joel Schneider) for integrating multiple IQ scores was started during the deliberations and was recently published (Schneider, Reynolds, McGrew & Salekin, 2026) after the oral argument's.  This issue will likely to be revisited in future state cases, with Schneider et al. (2026) now elevated to a scientifically sound multiple IQ composite score method.