Metro

SI cops’ killer eyed as too dumb for death

They say he’s too dumb to die for his heinous crimes.

A federal judge has scheduled a series of hearings later this month for testimony about whether a man convicted of the execution-style murder of two undercover NYPD officers is mentally competent to face the death penalty — again.

Ronell Wilson (pictured) has already been convicted of the point-blank shooting deaths of Detectives Rodney Andrews and James Nemorin during a 2003 undercover gun buy-and-bust operation on Staten Island.

And Wilson was condemned to death after his conviction, but in 2010, a federal appeals court overturned that sentence because of a procedural misstep.

Wilson’s attorneys insist that he should not be eligible for the death penalty — because of his low intellect.

They’re citing a landmark US Supreme Court ruling that bars execution of the mentally incompetent.

Brooklyn federal Judge Nicholas Garaufis will preside over the special hearings and listen as medical experts, specialists in mental disabilities and others weigh in on the issue.

The hearings — expected to span two weeks — are scheduled to begin later this month and stretch into December.

Prosecutors do not believe that Wilson is mentally impaired, and are expected to call witnesses that buttress their position.

If the court deems Wilson to be mentally fit, the judge will then schedule a new penalty-phase trial.

Jurors would then determine whether Wilson should be executed by lethal injection or sentenced to life in prison.