Lawyers for Bob Brockman say his cognitive functioning has deteriorated after a recent illness and that the former Reynolds and Reynolds Co. CEO is not competent to stand trial on federal charges of tax evasion and wire fraud.
Brockman, 80, contracted COVID-19 in December and was hospitalized a month later with acute prostatitis and toxic metabolic encephalopathy, according to a court filing Wednesday. The medical conditions caused his cognitive decline — the result of dementia, "most likely caused by Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease" — to worsen, his attorneys wrote.
Follow-up visits with his primary care doctor, the neurologist treating him for Parkinson's disease and Dr. Thomas Wisniewski, a neurologist at New York University who served as an expert witness for the defense at a competency hearing in November, "confirm that Mr. Brockman's cognitive function has declined, and provide further support that he is incompetent to stand trial," his lawyer…