Newsgather
BackSupreme Court Refuses to Halt Execution of Intellectually Disabled Murder Convict
Supreme Court Refuses to Halt Execution of Intellectually Disabled Murder Convict
Developing
NPR News6/22/2026Law2 min readUnited States

Supreme Court Refuses to Halt Execution of Intellectually Disabled Murder Convict

Quick Look

  • Supreme Court declined to hear the case of Victor Saldaño, convicted of murder in Texas, who claims intellectual disability.
  • Experts, including state-appointed ones, agree he meets the criteria, but Texas courts have disagreed, leaving his execution likely.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Victor Saldaño was convicted of murder in Texas in 1996. His defense and state experts later determined he is intellectually disabled, making him ineligible for execution under the law.

Font size

The U.S. Supreme Court refused Monday to stop the execution of Victor Saldaño, convicted of murder in Texas in 1996, but who subsequently got the support of not just defense experts, but state experts as well, who determined that he was intellectually disabled and thus not eligible for execution under the law.

Saldaño was convicted of murder in a robbery gone wrong, but his first lawyers did not raise the claim of intellectual disability at trial. Saldaño was in the country illegally at the time of the crime. Eventually, however, his case was referred to the Texas Office of Capital Forensic Writs, a state public defender's office. Lawyers there determined that Saldaño had an IQ of 74, within the range that could qualify him for not being executed.

Ben Wolff, the director of the Forensic Writs office, then went to Argentina, where Saldaño was raised. In an interview with NPR, Wolff said neighbors, family, and teachers all agreed that Saldaño was sometimes delusional and unable to understand such simple directions as how to cross the street without being hit by a car.

After viewing the evidence, prosecutors representing the state of Texas agreed that Saldaño should not be eligible for the death penalty. But the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals disagreed, and Saldaño's lawyers appealed to the Supreme Court.

On Monday, the Supreme Court refused to hear Saldaño's case, meaning that he is likely to be executed. His lawyers, however, said they will continue to their fight to prevent his execution.

The vote was 6-to-3 with the court's three liberals dissenting.

"Every expert who has evaluated Mr. Saldaño for intellectual disability agrees he's intellectually disabled," Wolff said in a statement. "The state of Texas, who several years ago sought Mr. Saldaño's execution, now agrees that he meets the criteria for intellectual disability. It is disappointing that the courts have yet to allow us through the courthouse doors to present what we believe to be overwhelming evidence that Mr. Saldaño is intellectually disabled and, as such, the U.S. Constitution forbids his execution."

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Victor Saldaño is likely to be executed.

    Likely · Short term

Open Questions

  • Will Saldaño's lawyers find another legal avenue?
  • Will Texas reconsider its stance on Saldaño's intellectual disability?
  • What is the exact IQ threshold for intellectual disability in Texas?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by NPR News.

Related Stories

More on this topicVictor Saldaño