Deaf people can do anything including kill, rape, steal and commit crimes except hear.
I saw those cites at a blog at Deaf Blogs and Vlogs - DeafRead
Berko, Michele-Lee. Preserving the sixth amendment right of the deaf criminal defendant.
97 Dickinson Law Review 101-130 (Fall 1992).
Harris, Susan R. The Hearing Impaired Advocate.
67 Judicature 95-97 (August 1983).
Harry, Bruce. A deaf sex offender.
29 Journal of Forensic Science 1140-1143 (October 1984).
Harry, Bruce. Offenders in a silent world: hearing impairment and deafness in relation to criminality, incompetence, and insanity.
13 American Academy of Psychiatry & Law Bulletin 85-96 (March 1985).
Gallie, Beth and Deirdre. Representing deaf clients: what every lawyer should know.
15 Maine Bar Journal 128-EOA (April 2000).
Gardner, Elaine. Deaf victims and defendants in the criminal justice system.
19 Clearinghouse Review 748-751 (November 1985).
Lee, Stephanie Hoit. Wisconsin v. Rewolinski: do members of the deaf community have a right to be free from search and seizure of their TDD call?
10 Law & Inequality 187-216 (June 1992).
Lee, Randy. Equal protection and a deaf person's right
to serve as a juror.
17 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 81-117 (1989/1990).
Manson, Harold. Jury selection: the courts, the constitution, and the deaf.
11 Pacific Law Journal 967-992 (July 1980).
McAlister, Jamie. Deaf and hard-of-hearing criminal defendants: how you gonna get justice if you can't talk to the judge?.
26 Arizona State Law Journal 163-200 (Spring 1994).
Relyea, Gregg. Procedural due process: a deaf defendant's right to be heard should encompass a right to 'hear' civil trials through interpretation.
29 Catholic University Law Review 867-890 (Summer 1980).
Sheridan, Brian D. Accommodations for the hearing impaired in state courts.
74 The Michigan Bar Journal 396-400 (May 1995).
Shipley, Andrew E. The Deaf Witness.
14 Litigation 13-15 (Fall 1987).
Simon, Jo Anne. The use of interpreters for the deaf and the legal community's obligation to comply with the ADA.
8 Journal of Law and Health 155-199 (1993/1994).
Smith, Deirdre M. Confronting silence: the Constitution, deaf criminal defendants, and the right to interpretation during trial.
46 Maine Law Review 87-150 (1994).
Tucker, Bonnie. Deaf prison inmates: time to be heard.
22 Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 1-71 (November 1988).
Tucker, Bonnie P. Accommodating hearing-impaired law students and faculty members.
41 Journal of Legal Education 355-361 (September/December 1991).
Tucker, Bonnie. Mental health services for deaf persons: proposed legislation.
Arizona State Law Journal 673-704 (Fall 1980).
Vernon, McCay and Lawrence Raifman. Recognizing and handling problems of incompetent deaf defendants charged with serious offenses.
20 International Journal of Law and Psychiatry 373-387 (Summer 1997).
Vernon, McCay., Raifman, Lawrence J. and Greenberg, Sheldon F. Forensic pretrial police interviews of deaf suspects: avoiding legal pitfalls.
24 International Journal of Law and Psychiatry 43-59 (January/February 2001).
Vernon, McCay, Lawrence Raifman, and Sheldon Greenberg. The Miranda (Miranda v. Arizona, 86 S. Ct. 1602 (1966)) warnings and the deaf suspect.
14 Behavioral Sciences & the Law 121-135 (Winter 1996).
Vernon, McCay; Steinberg, Annie G.; Montoya, Louise A. Deaf murderers: clinical and forensic issues.
17 Behavioral Sci. & L. 495-516 (Autumn 1999).
Wood, Jeffrey. Protecting deaf suspects' right to understand criminal proceedings.
75 The Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 166-197 (Spring 1984).
The Confidentiality of criminal conversations in TDD Relay Systems,
79 California Law Review 1349-87 (October 1991).
Due process: the deaf and the blind as jurors.
17 New England Law Review 119-152 (1981/1982).
Protecting deaf suspects' right to understand criminal proceedings.
75 The Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology 166-197 (Spring 1984).
Recognizing and preserving legal rights for the hearing impaired in the courtroom.
57 Wisconsin Bar Bulletin 14-16 (November 1984).