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  <title>Episode 288: Recognizing Defendants’ Disabilities</title>
  <description>The criminal legal system often misunderstands—and mishandles—people with intellectual disabilities. Law professor Katie Kronick explains how and why these individuals so often fall through the cracks in a system built around efficiency and rigid rules. She breaks down the stakes with real examples, including a high-profile death penalty case now before the Supreme Court, and shares ideas for building a criminal justice system that recognizes and respects the needs of defendants with intellectual disabilities. For more on this topic:&amp;amp;nbsp;   Read Kronick’s  amicus brief for the Supreme Court case Hamm v. Smith   Check out her essay in the Sentencing Matters Substack:  Why is it So Hard for Courts to Adjust to Advancements in Knowledge of Human Behavior?  Read her op-ed in the Baltimore Sun:&amp;amp;nbsp;The Criminal Legal System Is Failing People With Intellectual Disabilities  </description>
  <author_name>Scholars Strategy Network's No Jargon</author_name>
  <author_url>https://scholars.org/podcast</author_url>
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