
Death penalty statutes in the United
States
Color key:
Capital
punishment in the United States
varies by jurisdiction and is applied
rarely: in practice only for aggravated murder and even more rarely
for felony
murder or contract
killing. The history of U.S. capital punishment begins
in the colonies under the laws of their mother countries and was
carried over into United States law and the law of most of the U.S.
states and territories.
The methods of execution and the crimes subject to the penalty vary
by jurisdiction and have varied widely throughout time. Some
jurisdictions have banned it, others have suspended its use, but
others are trying to expand its applicability. There were 37
executions in 2008. That is the lowest number since 1994 (largely
due to
lethal injection
litigation), though it may increase by 2009.Capital punishment is a
controversial issue, with many prominent organizations and
individuals participating in the debate.
Arguments for and against
capital
punishment are based on moral, practical, religious, and
emotional grounds. Advocates of the death penalty argue that it
deters crime, is a good tool for prosecutors (in
plea bargaining for example), improves the
community by making sure that convicted criminals do not offend
again, provides closure to surviving victims or loved ones, and is
a just penalty for their crime. Opponents argue that the death
penalty is not an effective means of deterring crime, is
unnecessarily barbaric in nature, is levied disproportionately upon
men and racial minorities, cheapens human life and puts a
government on the same base moral level as those criminals involved
in murder.
Another argument (specific to the United States) on the
capital punishment debate is the
cost. The convict is more likely to use the whole appeals process
if the jury issues a death sentence than if it issues
life
without parole. But others who contest this argument says the
greater cost of appeals where the prosecution does seek the death
penalty is offset by the savings from avoiding trial altogether in
cases where the defendant pleads guilty to avoid the death
penalty.
Historically, several states have been
without capital punishment - the earliest being Michigan, which has not
carried out a single execution of its own since it entered the
Union
(one federal
execution occurred in Michigan in
1938), and shortly after attaining statehood abolished the death
penalty for ordinary crimes, making it the first English-speaking
government in the world to do so. Other states long without
the death penalty are
Wisconsin (with the
distinction of being the only state to perform a single state-level
execution in its history),
Oregon (though only
temporarily),
Rhode
Island (although later reintroduced, it was unused and
abolished again),
South Dakota (though only
temporarily),
Maine,
Washington, North
Dakota, Minnesota,
West Virginia, Iowa,
Vermont, and the
District of Columbia. Two states - the newest, Alaska and Hawaii -
abolished the death penalty prior to statehood (in Alaska, some
extrajudicial killings took
place after statehood).
In the so-called "
modern era of capital
punishment", two states have legislatively abolished the death
penalty and two have
de facto abolishment through their
state judiciaries.
In 2007, New Jersey
became the first state to repeal the death penalty
in the modern system of capital punishment, and New Mexico
followed in 2009 (though not retroactively, and
with some advocating
reinstatement). But in states with a large death row population and regular executions,
including California
and Texas
, the death
penalty remains strongly in the landscape and is unlikely to end at
any time soon.
Three
states in the modern era, New York
and Kansas
in 2004, and
Massachusetts
in 1984, had their statutes ruled unconstitutional
by state courts. The death rows of New York and
Massachusetts were disestablished. None of the three states have
performed executions since the constitutionality of capital
punishment was affirmed by the Supreme Court in 1976, having done
so last in 1963, 1965, and 1947, respectively. In New York and
Massachusetts, attempts to restore the death penalty were
unsuccessful, while Kansas
successfully
appealed State v. Kleypas to the U.S.
Supreme Court
, the Kansas Supreme Court
decision which declared the state's death penalty
statute unconstitutional, and death sentences continue to be
sought. New York had previously abolished the death penalty
temporarily, in 1860.
The only jurisdictions with constitutional
death penalty statutes that have not performed an execution since
1976 are New
Hampshire
, Kansas
, and the
United
States military, although all have populated death
rows.
History
Capital
punishment has been illegal in the U.S.
state of Michigan
since 1846, making Michigan's death penalty history
unusual in contrast to many other states. Michigan was the
first English-speaking government in the world to abolish the death
penalty for all crimes except treason. On March 18, 2009, Governor
Bill Richardson signed legislation,
effective July 1, to make New Mexico the 15th state to ban the
death penalty.
The Espy file lists 15,269 people executed in the United States and
its predecessors between 1608 and 1991. 4,661 executions occurred
in the U.S. in the period from 1930 to 2002 with about two-thirds
of the executions occurring in the first 20 years. Additionally the
United States Army executed 135
soldiers between 1916 and 1999.
The largest single execution in United States history was the
hanging of 38
Dakota people convicted
of
murder and
rape in the
Dakota War of 1862.
They were executed
simultaneously on December 26, 1862 in Mankato,
Minnesota
. A single blow from an axe cut the rope that
held the large four-sided platform, and the prisoners (except for
one whose rope had broken, and who consequently had to be restrung)
fell to their deaths. The second largest mass execution in United
States history was also a hanging: the execution of 13 African
American soldiers for their parts in the
Houston Riot in 1917. Notably, both
incidents involved ethnic minority defendants, and military
tribunal judgments in time of war.
The largest non-military public mass
execution in one of the original thirteen colonies occurred in 1723
when 26 pirates were executed in Newport,
Rhode Island
by order of the Admiralty Court.
Suspension by Supreme Court
Capital punishment was suspended in the United States from 1972
through 1976 primarily as a result of the Supreme Court's decision
in
Furman v. Georgia, . In this case, the court
found the imposition of the death penalty in a consolidated group
of cases to be
unconstitutional, on
the grounds of
cruel and
unusual punishment in violation of the
eighth
amendment to the
United
States Constitution.
In
Furman, the United States Supreme Court
considered a group of consolidated cases.
The lead case involved an individual convicted under Georgia's
death penalty statute, which featured a "unitary trial" procedure
in which the jury was asked to return a verdict of guilt or
innocence and, simultaneously, determine whether the defendant
would be punished by death or life imprisonment.
In a five-to-four decision, the Supreme Court struck down the
imposition of the death penalties in each of the consolidated cases
as unconstitutional. The five justices in the majority did not
produce a common opinion or rationale for their decision, however,
and agreed only on a short statement announcing the result. The
narrowest opinions, those of
Byron White
and
Potter Stewart, expressed
generalized concerns about the inconsistent application of the
death penalty across a variety of cases but did not exclude the
possibility of a constitutional death penalty law. Stewart and
William O. Douglas worried explicitly about racial
discrimination in enforcement of the death penalty.
Thurgood Marshall and
William J. Brennan, Jr. expressed the opinion
that the death penalty was proscribed absolutely by the Eighth
Amendment as "cruel and unusual" punishment.
Though many observers expected few, if any, states to readopt the
death penalty after
Furman, 37 states did in fact enact
new death penalty statutes which attempted to address the concerns
of White and Stewart. Some of the states responded by enacting
"mandatory" death penalty statutes which prescribed a sentence of
death for anyone convicted of certain forms of murder (White had
hinted such a scheme would meet his constitutional concerns in his
Furman opinion).
Other states adopted "bifurcated" trial and sentencing procedures,
with various procedural limitations on the jury's ability to
pronounce a death sentence designed to limit juror discretion. The
Court clarified
Furman in
Woodson v. North Carolina, and
Roberts v.
Louisiana, , , which
explicitly forbade any state from punishing a specific form of
murder (such as that of a police officer) with a mandatory death
penalty.
Capital punishment resumed
In 1976, contemporaneously with
Woodson and
Roberts, the Court decided
Gregg v. Georgia, and upheld a procedure in
which the trial of capital crimes was bifurcated into
guilt-innocence and sentencing phases. At the first proceeding, the
jury decides the defendant's guilt; if the defendant is innocent or
otherwise not convicted of first-degree murder, the death penalty
will not be imposed. At the second hearing, the jury determines
whether certain statutory aggravating factors exist, and whether
any
mitigating factors exist, and,
in many jurisdictions, weigh the aggravating and mitigating factors
in assessing the ultimate penalty — either death or life in prison,
either with or without parole.
The 1977
Coker v.
Georgia decision barred
the death penalty for
rape, and, by
implication, for any offense other than murder. The current federal
kidnapping statute, however, may be exempt due to the fact that the
death penalty applies if the victim expires in the perpetrator's
custody, not necessarily by his hand, thus stipulating a resulting
death, which was the wording of the objection. In addition, the
federal government retains the death penalty for such non-murder
offenses as treason, espionage and crimes under military
jurisdiction; there has been no challenge to these statutes as of
2007.
Executions resumed on January 17, 1977, when
Gary Gilmore went before a firing squad in Utah
. But
the pace was quite halting due to use of litigation tactics which
involved filing repeated writs for
habeas
corpus, which succeeded for many in delaying their actual
execution for many years. Although hundreds of individuals were
sentenced to death in the U.S. during the 1970s and early 1980s,
only ten people besides Gilmore (who had waived all of his appeal
rights) were actually executed prior to 1984.
The United States Supreme Court, though, has placed two major
restrictions on the use of the death penalty. First, the Supreme
Court case of
Atkins v.
Virginia, decided June
20, 2002, held that executions of
mentally retarded criminals are "
cruel and unusual punishments"
prohibited by the
Eighth
Amendment. Generally, a person with an
IQ below 70 is considered to be
mentally retarded. Prior to this decision, between 1984 and 2002
forty-four
mentally retarded
inmates were executed.
Second, in 2005 the Supreme Court's decision in
Roper v. Simmons, , abolished executions for
persons under the age of 18 (the age is determined at the time of
crime, not the trial date).
New Mexico repealed its death penalty statute on March 17, 2009,
becoming the second state (after New Jersey) to abolish the death
penalty since executions resumed in 1976. The law, signed by
Governor
Bill Richardson, took
effect on July 1, 2009 and replaces the death penalty with a life
sentence without the possibility of parole. The law, though, is not
retroactive – inmates currently on New Mexico's Death Row and
persons convicted of capital offenses committed before this date
may still be sentenced to death under New Mexico's pre-existing
death penalty statute.
Possibly in part due to expedited
federal habeas corpus
procedures embodied in the
Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, the pace of executions
has picked up. Since the death penalty was reauthorized in 1976
1,181 people have been executed, almost exclusively by the states,
with most occurring after 1990.
Texas
has
accounted for over a third of modern executions (and over four
times as many as Virginia, the state with the second-highest
number); California
has the greatest number of prisoners on death row,
but has held relatively few executions. See the table for
executions and death row inmates by jurisdiction.
Crimes subject to capital punishment
Crimes subject to the death penalty vary by jurisdiction. All
jurisdictions that use capital punishment designate the highest
grade of
murder a capital crime, although
most jurisdictions require aggravating circumstances.
Treason is a capital offense in several
jurisdictions.
Other
capital crimes include: the use of a weapon of mass destruction
resulting in death, espionage, terrorism, certain violations of the Geneva
Conventions that result in the death of one or more persons,
and treason at the federal level; aggravated
rape in Louisiana
, Florida
, and Oklahoma
; extortionate kidnapping in Oklahoma
; aggravated kidnapping in
Georgia
, Idaho
, Kentucky
and South Carolina
; aircraft hijacking in Alabama
; drug trafficking
resulting in a person's death in Connecticut
; train wrecking which leads to a person's death,
and perjury which leads to a person's death in California
.
Additionally, the
Uniform Code of Military
Justice allows capital punishment for a list of offenses during
wartime including:
desertion,
mutiny,
spying, and misconduct
before the enemy. In practice, no one has been executed for a crime
other than murder or conspiracy to murder since
James Coburn was executed for
robbery in Alabama on September 4, 1964. On
June 25, 2008 in
Kennedy
v. Louisiana,
the US Supreme Court ruled against Louisiana's child rape death
penalty, saying "there is a distinction between intentional
first-degree murder on the one hand and nonhomicide crimes against
individual persons." The Court went beyond the question in the case
to also rule out the death penalty for any crime against an
individual (as opposed to "offenses against the state," such as
treason or
espionage, or
crimes against humanity) "where the
victim’s life was not taken."
As of November 2008, there is only one person on death row facing
capital punishment that has not been convicted of murder. Demarcus
Ali Sears remains under a death sentence in Georgia for the crime
of "Kidnapping With Bodily Injury." Sears was convicted in 1993 for
the Kidnapping and Bodily Injury of victim Gloria Ann Wilbur.
Wilbur was kidnapped and beaten in Georgia, raped in Tennessee, and
murdered in Kentucky. Sears was never charged with the murder of
Wilbur in Kentucky, but was sentenced to death by a jury in Georgia
for Kidnapping with Bodily Injury.
The last executions solely for crimes other than homicide were,
respectively:
- Robbery – James Coburn
on September 4, 1964, in Alabama
- Rape
– Ronald Wolfe on May 8, 1964, in Missouri
.
- Criminal assault – Rudolph Wright on
January 11, 1962, in California.
- Kidnapping – Billy Monk on November 21, 1960, in
California.
- Robbery/rape/kidnapping – Caryl
Chessman on May 2, 1960, in California.
- Espionage –
Ethel and Julius
Rosenberg on June 19, 1953, in New York
(Federal execution)
- Desertion –
Eddie Slovik on January 31, 1945, in
Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines
, France
(Execution by firing
squad).
- Burglary – Frank Bass on August 8, 1941, in Alabama.
- Train Robbery –
Black Jack Ketchum April 26, 1901
in Clayton
, New Mexico
Territory
- Arson – George Hughes, George Smith, and
Asbury Hughes on August 1, 1884, in Alabama.
- Piracy – Nathaniel Gordon on February 21, 1862, in
New York (Federal execution). Was actually executed for slave
trading, which was defined as piracy and therefore subject to the
same penalty.
- Treason – John Conn in 1862 in Texas.
- Slave revolt – Slaves named Caesar,
Sam and Sanford on 19 October 1860, in Alabama.
- Aiding a runaway slave – Starling Carlton in 1859 in South
Carolina.
- Theft – Slave named Jake on December 3, 1855, in Alabama.
- Horse stealing – James Wilson and Fred
Salkman on 28 November 1851, in California.
- Forgery – Unknown defendant on 6 March
1840, in South Carolina.
- Counterfeiting – Thomas Davis on 11
October 1822, in Alabama.
- Sodomy/buggery/bestiality –
Joseph Ross on December 20, 1785, in Westmoreland
Co.
, Pennsylvania
.
- Concealing the
birth/death of an infant – Hannah Piggen in 1785 in Middlesex
, Massachusetts
.
- Witchcraft –
African American person named Manuel on June 15, 1779, in
(present-day) Illinois
.
Several people who were executed have received posthumous pardons
for their crimes. For example, slave revolt was a capital crime,
and many who were executed for that reason have since been
posthumously pardoned.
The legal process
The legal administration of the death penalty in the United States is complex. Typically, it involves four critical steps: (1) Sentencing, (2) Direct Review, (3) State Collateral Review, and (4) Federal Habeas Corpus. Recently, a narrow and final fifth level of process—(5) the Section 1983 Challenge—has become increasingly important. (Clemency or Pardon, through which the Governor or President of the jurisdiction can unilaterally reduce or abrogate a death sentence, is an executive rather than legal process.)
Direct review
If a defendant is sentenced to death at the trial level, the case
then goes into a
direct review. The direct review
process is a typical legal
appeal. An
appellate court examines the record
of evidence presented in the trial court and the law that the lower
court applied and decides whether the decision was legally sound or
not. Direct review of a capital sentencing hearing will result in
one of three outcomes. If the appellate court finds that no
significant legal errors occurred in the capital sentencing
hearing, the appellate court will
affirm the
judgment, or let the sentence stand. If the appellate court finds
that significant legal errors did occur, then it will
reverse the judgment, or nullify the sentence and
order a new capital sentencing hearing. Lastly, if the appellate
court finds that no reasonable juror could find the defendant
eligible for the death penalty, a rarity, then it will order the
defendant
acquitted, or not guilty, of the crime
for which he/she was given the death penalty, and order him
sentenced to the next most severe punishment for which the offense
is eligible. A majority of death sentences, however — about 60% —
survive the process of direct review intact.
State collateral review
At times when a death sentence is affirmed on direct review, it is
considered final. Yet, supplemental methods to attack the judgment,
though less familiar than a typical appeal, do remain. These
supplemental remedies are considered
collateral
review, that is, an avenue for upsetting judgments that
have become otherwise final. Where the prisoner received his death
sentence in a state-level trial, as is usually the case, the first
step in collateral review is
State Collateral
Review. (If the case is a federal death penalty case, it
proceeds immediately from direct review to federal habeas corpus.)
Although all states have some type of collateral review, the
process varies widely from state to state. Generally, the purpose
of these collateral proceedings is to permit the prisoner to
challenge his sentence on grounds that could not have been raised
reasonably at trial or on direct review. Most often these are
claims, such as
ineffective assistance of
counsel, which require the court to consider new evidence
outside the original trial record, something courts may not do in
an ordinary
appeal. State Collateral Review,
though an important step in that it helps define the scope of
subsequent review through Federal Habeas Corpus, is rarely
successful in and of itself. Only around 6% of death sentences are
overturned on State Collateral Review.
Federal habeas corpus
After a death sentence is affirmed in State Collateral Review, the
prisoner may file for
Federal Habeas Corpus (from
the Latin for "produce the body"; cf.
habeas corpus), which is a unique type of
lawsuit that can be brought in federal courts. Federal habeas
corpus is a species of collateral review, and it is the only way
that state prisoners may attack a death sentence in federal court
(other than petitions for certiorari to the United States Supreme
Court after both direct review and state collateral review). The
scope of federal habeas corpus is governed by the
Antiterrorism
and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, which restricted
significantly its previous scope. The purpose of Federal habeas
corpus is to ensure that state courts, through the process of
direct review and State Collateral Review, have done at least a
reasonable job in protecting the prisoner's Federal
Constitutional Rights. Prisoners may
also use Federal habeas corpus suits to bring forth new evidence
that they are innocent of the crime, though to be a valid defense
at this late stage in the process, evidence of innocence must be
truly compelling.
Review through federal habeas corpus is narrow in theory, but it is
important in practice. According to Eric Freedman, 21% of death
penalty cases are reversed through federal habeas corpus.
James Lieberman, a professor of law at the Columbia law school,
stated in 1996 that his study found that when habeas corpus
petitions in death penalty cases were traced from conviction to
completion of the case that there was "a 40 percent success rate in
all capital cases from 1978 to 1995." Similarly, a study by Ronald
Tabek in a law review article puts the success rate in habeas
corpus cases involving death row inmates even higher, finding that
between "1976 and 1991, approximately 47% of the habeas petitions
filed by death row inmates were granted." The different numbers are
largely definitional, rather than substantive. Freedam's statistics
looks at the percentage of all death penalty cases reversed, while
the others look only at cases not reversed prior to habeas corpus
review.
Section 1983 contested
Under the
Antiterrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act, a state prisoner is ordinarily
only allowed one suit for habeas corpus in federal court. If the
federal courts refuse to issue a
writ of habeas
corpus, an
execution date may be
set. In recent times, however, prisoners have postponed execution
through a final round of federal litigation using the
Civil Rights Act of 1871 —
codified at — which allows people to bring lawsuits to
protect their civil rights.
Traditionally, Section 1983 was of limited use for a state prisoner
under sentence of death because the Supreme Court has held that
habeas corpus, not Section 1983, is the only vehicle by which a
state prisoner can challenge his judgment of death. In the recent
Hill v. McDonough case, however, the United States
Supreme Court approved the use of Section 1983 as a vehicle for
challenging a state's method of execution as
cruel and unusual punishment in
violation of the
Eighth
Amendment. The theory is that a prisoner bringing such a
challenge is not attacking directly his judgment of death, but
rather the means that the judgment will be carried out. Therefore,
the Supreme Court held in the
Hill
case, a prisoner can use Section 1983 rather than habeas corpus
to bring the lawsuit. Yet, as
Clarence Hill's own case shows,
lower federal courts have often refused to hear suits challenging
methods of execution on the ground that the prisoner brought the
claim too late and only for the purposes of delay.
Mitigating factor
The
United
States Supreme Court
in Penry v.
Lynaugh and the
United
States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in
Bigby v. Dretke have been clear in their decisions
that
jury instructions in death
penalty cases that do not ask about
mitigating factors regarding the
defendant's
mental health violate the
defendant's
Eighth
Amendment rights, saying that the jury is to be instructed to
consider mitigating factors when answering unrelated questions.
This ruling suggests specific explanations to jury is necessary to
weigh mitigating factors.
Methods
Usage of lethal injection for executions in the United States
Color key:
Various methods have been used in the history of the American
colonies and the United States but only five methods are currently
used. Historically,
burning,
pressing,
breaking on wheel and bludgeoning were used
for a small number of executions, while
hanging was the most common method.
The last person
burned to death was a black slave in South Carolina
in August 1825. The last person to be
hanged in chains was a murderer named John
Marshall in West
Virginia
on April 4,
1913. Although decapitation was a legal method in Utah
for the
second half of the 19th century, it was never
employed.
Currently
lethal injection is the
method used or allowed in all of the 37 states which allow the
death penalty.
Nebraska
required electrocution, but in 2008 the state supreme
court ruled the method is unconstitutional. In mid 2009
Nebraska officially changed its method of execution to lethal
injection. Other states also allow
electrocution,
gas
chambers,
hanging and the
firing squad. From 1976 to November 20, 2009
there were 1,183 executions, of which 1,011 were by lethal
injection, 156 by electrocution, 11 by gas chamber, 3 by hanging,
and 2 by firing squad.
The method of execution of federal prisoners for offenses under the
Violent
Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 is that of the
state in which the conviction took place. If the state has no death
penalty, the judge must choose a state with the death penalty for
carrying out the execution. For offenses under the 1988
Drug Kingpin Law, the method of executions
is lethal injection.
Federal
Correctional Complex, Terre Haute
is currently the home of the only death chamber for
federal death penalty recipients in the United States, where they
receive lethal injection.
The use of lethal injection has almost become standard. From June
2000 to July 20, 2006, only 6 out of 387 executions have been by a
different method.
The last execution by any other method was
the use of the electric chair on November 17, 2009 when Larry Bill Elliott was executed in
Virginia
. The last use of the gas chamber occurred on
March 3, 1999 when Walter LaGrand was
executed in Arizona
, the last use of hanging was on 25 January 1996
when Delaware
hanged Billy Bailey and
the firing squad was also last used in 1996 when John Albert Taylor was shot in Utah
on January
26.
Montana
, until recently, was one of three states allowing
the execution of a death sentence by hanging:
The remaining two states that allow hanging are New Hampshire
, which allows it by decision of the Corrections officials, and in Washington State, at the choice of the defendant.
The electric chair was the major method of execution during most of
the 20th century.
They developed a special nickname: Old Sparky (however, Alabama's electric chair
became known as the "Yellow
Mama
" due to its unique color). Some, particularly in
Florida
, were noted for malfunctions, which caused
discussion of their cruelty and resulted in a shift to lethal
injection as the major method of execution. Although lethal
injection dominates as a method of execution, some states allow an
alternate method and a few states allow at least some death-row
inmates to choose the method by which they will be executed.
Regardless of the method, an hour or two before the execution, the
condemned person is offered religious services, and a
last meal. Executions are carried out in private
with only invited persons able to view the proceedings.
Ages of condemned prisoners

Executions in the United States from
1608 to 2004

Executions in the United States from
1930 to 2004

Total number of prisoners on Death
Row in the United States from 1953 to 2003
Since 1642 (in the
13 colonies, the
United States under the
Articles of Confederation, and the
current United States) an estimated 364 juvenile offenders have
been put to death by states and the federal government. The first
known juvenile to be executed was
Thomas
Graunger in 1642. Twenty-two of the executions occurred after
1976, in seven states. Due to the slow process of appeals, it was
highly unusual for a condemned person to be under 18 at the time of
execution. The youngest person to be executed in the 20th century
was
George Stinney, at the age of 14,
in 1944. The last execution of a juvenile may have been
Leonard Shockley, executed on April 10,
1959 at the age of 17. No one has been under age 19 at time of
execution since at least 1964. Since the reinstatement of the death
penalty in 1976, 22 people have been executed for crimes committed
under the age of 18. 21 were 17 at the time of the crime.
The last
person to be executed for a crime committed as a juvenile was
Scott Allen Hain on April 3, 2003
in Oklahoma
.
Before 2005, of the 38 U.S. states that allow capital punishment:
- 19 states and the federal government had set a minimum age of
18,
- Five states had set a minimum age of 17, and
- 14 states had explicitly set a minimum age of 16, or were
subject to the Supreme Court's imposition of that minimum.
16 was
held to be the minimum permissible age in the 1988 Supreme Court
of the United States
decision of Thompson v. Oklahoma. The Supreme Court,
considering the case
Roper
v. Simmons, in
March 2005, found execution of juvenile offenders unconstitutional
by a 5–4 margin, effectively raising the minimum permissible age to
18. State laws have not been updated to conform with this decision.
Under the US system, unconstitutional
laws do
not need to be repealed, but are instead held to be unenforceable.
(See also
List of
juvenile offenders executed in the United States)
Distribution of sentences
Within the context of the overall murder rate, the death penalty
cannot be said to be widely or routinely used in the United States;
in recent years the average has been about one execution for about
every 700 murders committed, or 1 execution for about every 325
murder convictions.
It is noted that the death penalty is sought and applied more often
in some jurisdictions, not only between states but within states.
A 2004
Cornell
University
study showed that while 2.5% of murderers convicted
nationwide were sentenced to the death penalty, in Nevada
6% were
given the death penalty. Texas
gave 2% of
murderers the death sentence, less than the national
average. Texas, however, executed 40% of those sentenced,
which was about four times higher than the national average.
California
had executed only 1% of those
sentenced.
Only 0.9% of those executed since 1976 have been women.
African Americans made up 41% of
death row inmates while making up only 12% of the general
population. (They have made up 34% of those actually executed since
1976.) Conversely, others note that this is lower than the 50% of
the total prison population which was African American and that
whites are in fact twice as likely as African Americans to receive
the death penalty, and are also executed more quickly after
sentencing. U.S. Department of Justice statistics show that
African-Americans constituted 48 percent of adults charged with
homicide, but only 41 percent of those sentenced of death. Once
arrested for murder, African-Americans are less likely to receive a
capital sentence than are whites.
Academic studies indicate that the single greatest predictor of
whether a death sentence is given, however, is not the race of the
defendant, but the race of the victim. According to a 2003
Amnesty International report, blacks
and whites were the victims of murder in almost equal numbers, yet
80% of the people executed since 1977 were convicted of murders
involving white victims. But, others say intra-racial murders, most
likely between persons who know one another are circumstances often
viewed as inappropriate for the death penalty. Because those
sentenced to death often don't know their victim's (
e.g.,
killing during rape or robbery), this victim is likely to be
white.
Half of the ten inmates on Connecticut's death row have been
condemned for the murders of minorities and five of the 37 inmates
executed in South Carolina were white men convicted of murdering
African-Americans. In October 2000, a study found that distribution
of death sentences is biased against whites in Southern states,
where most of the executions takes places. The study found
distribution of death sentences neutral on Midwest and West and
racially biased against blacks in Pennsylvania. Since 1976,
Pennsylvania had executed three inmates, all were whites.
Public vs. private execution
The last
public execution in America was that of Rainey Bethea in Owensboro,
Kentucky
, on August 14, 1936. It was the last death
sentence in the nation at which the general public was permitted to
attend without any legally-imposed restrictions. "Public execution"
is a legal phrase, defined by the laws of various states, and
carried out pursuant to a court order. Similar to "public record"
or "public meeting," it means that anyone who wants to attend the
execution may do so.
About 1890, a political movement developed in the United States to
mandate private executions. Several states enacted laws which
required executions to be conducted within a "wall" or "enclosure"
to "exclude public view." For example, in 1919, the Missouri
legislature adopted a statute (L.1919, p. 781) which required,
"the sentence of death should be executed within the county jail,
if convenient, and otherwise within an enclosure near the jail."
The Missouri law permitted the local sheriff to distribute passes
to individuals (usually local citizens) whom he believed should
witness the hanging, but the sheriffs—for various reasons—sometimes
denied passes to individuals who wanted to watch. Missouri
executions conducted after 1919 were not "public" because they were
conducted behind closed walls, and the general public was not
permitted to attend.
Present-day statutes from across the nation use the same words and
phrases, requiring modern executions to take place within a wall or
enclosure to exclude public view. Connecticut (CGSA 54-100)
requires death sentences to be conducted in an "enclosure" which
"shall be so constructed as to exclude public view." Kentucky (KRS
431.220) and Missouri (VAMS 546.730) statutes contain substantially
identical language. New Mexico's statute (NMSA 31-14-12) requires
executions be conducted in a "room or place enclosed from public
view." A dormant Massachusetts law (MGLA. 279 § 60) requires
executions to take place "within an enclosure or building." North
Carolina (NCGSA § 15-188) requires death sentences to be executed
"within the walls" of the penitentiary, as do Oklahoma (22
Okl.St.Ann. § 1015) and Montana (MCA 46-19-103). Ohio (RC §
2949.22) requires, "The enclosure shall exclude public view."
Similarly, Tennessee (TCA § 40-23-116) requires "an enclosure" for
"strict seclusion and privacy." Federal law (18 U.S.C.A. § 3596 and
28 CFR 26.3) specifically limits the witnesses to be present at an
execution..
Today, there are always witnesses to executions—sometimes numerous
witnesses, but it is the law, not the number of witnesses present,
which determines whether the execution is "public."
All of the executions which have taken place since the 1936 hanging
of Bethea in Owensboro have been conducted within a wall or
enclosure. For example, Fred Adams was legally hanged in Kennett,
Missouri, on April 2, 1937, within a wooden stockade.
Roscoe "Red" Jackson
was hanged within a stockade in Galena, Missouri
, on May 26, 1937. Two Kentucky hangings
were conducted after Galena in which numerous persons were present
within a wooden stockade, that of John "Peter" Montjoy in Covington,
Kentucky
on December 17, 1937, and that of Harold Van
Venison in Covington on June 3, 1938. An estimated 400
witnesses were present for the hanging of Lee Simpson in Ryegate,
Montana
, on December 30, 1939. The execution of
Timothy McVeigh on June 11, 2001,
was witnessed by some 300 people (some by closed circuit
television), so some might call it a "public execution," even
though federal law does not permit public executions. See 18
U.S.C.A. § 3596 and the federal administrative regulation
implementing it, 28 CFR § 26.4. A “public execution” means that all
the public has access.
Clemency and commutations
The
largest number of clemencies was granted January 2003 in Illinois
, when outgoing Governor
George Ryan, who had already imposed a
moratorium on executions, pardoned four death-row inmates and
commuted the sentences of the remaining 167 to life in prison
without the possibility of parole.
Previous
post-Furman mass clemencies took place in 1986 in New Mexico
, when Governor Toney
Anaya commuted all death sentences because of his personal
opposition to the death penalty. However, two of these
inmates escaped shortly afterwards, one kidnapping a family of four
in California.
In 1991 outgoing Ohio
Governor
Dick Celeste commuted the sentences of
eight prisoners among them all four women on the state's death
row. And during his two terms (1979-1987) as
Florida
Governor, Bob Graham,
although a strong death penalty supporter who had overseen the
first post-Furman involuntary execution as well as 15 others,
agreed to commute the sentences of six people on grounds of
"possible innocence" or "disproportionality."
Controversy over use of death penalty
Various groups oppose or support capital punishment.
Amnesty International and some
religions oppose capital punishment on moral grounds, while the
Innocence Project works to free
wrongly convicted prisoners, including death row inmates, based on
newly available DNA tests. Other groups, such as the
Southern Baptists, law
enforcement organizations, and some victims' rights groups support
capital punishment.
Opinion polls consistently show that a majority of the American
public supports the death penalty. A May 2005 Gallup poll had 74%
of respondents in "favor of the death penalty for a person
convicted of murder". In the same Gallup poll, when life
imprisonment without parole was given as an option as a punishment
for murder, 56% supported the death penalty and 39% supported life
imprisonment, with 5% offering no opinion.
Elections have
sometimes turned on the issue; in 1986, three justices were removed
from the Supreme Court of California
by the electorate (including Chief Justice Rose Bird) partly because of their opposition to
the death penalty.
Religious groups are widely split on the issue of capital
punishment, generally with more conservative groups more likely to
support it and more liberal groups more likely to oppose it.
The debate over the death penalty centers around four issues:
whether it is morally correct to kill; whether the death penalty
serves as a deterrent; whether the penalty is being applied fairly
across racial, social, and economic classes; and whether the
irrevocability of the penalty is justified considering possible new
evidence or future revelations of improper conduct by the state. It
is also claimed that the financial costs of a complete death
penalty case exceed the total costs of a lifetime of incarceration.
Between 1976 and 2003, less than 2% of death row prisoners were
exonerated, while others had their sentences reduced for other
reasons. This amounted to 112 prisoners released.
Suicide on death row
The suicide rate of death row inmates was found by Lester and
Tartaro to be 113 per 100,000 for the period 1976–1999. This is
about ten times the rate of suicide in the United States as a whole
and about six times the rate of suicide in the general U.S. prison
population.
Moratoria
Since the death penalty was reinstated in Illinois in 1977, 12 men
have been executed. During that same period, 13 men were freed from
death row. This finding prompted the outgoing governor of Illinois,
Republican George H. Ryan,
who had previously ordered a moratorium on executions by the state,
to commute all death penalties in his state in January 2003. When
Democrat Rod Blagojevich was elected governor in
2002, one of his first acts was an attempt to revoke some of Ryan's
commutations.
In addition to Ryan's moratorium, Governor
Parris N. Glendening (D) halted executions in the
state of Maryland
by executive order on May 9,
2002, but the subsequent governor, Robert
Ehrlich (R), resumed executions in 2004. However, on December
19, 2006, the Maryland Court of Appeals
ruled that state executions would be suspended
until the manual that spells out the protocol for lethal injections
is reviewed by a legislative panel. The state's Department
of Corrections had adopted the manual without having a public
hearing or submitting it before a committee. Legislative review of
the protocol is required before approval under state law.
In December 2005, the New Jersey State Senate passed a one-year
moratorium on executions by the state. The measure was passed by
the legislature on January 10, 2006.
Governor Richard J.
Codey signed the measure into law
on January 12. New Jersey is the first state to pass such a
moratorium legislatively, rather than by executive order. Although
New Jersey reinstated the death penalty in 1982, the state has not
executed anyone since 1963. On December 17, 2007, with the signing
of an abolition bill by Governor
Jon
Corzine, New Jersey became the 14th state without a death
penalty at a time when its use is declining in most of the 36
states—plus the federal government and U.S. military—that retain
it, but the first state to recently abolish it by legislative
action rather than by judicial decision. As a result, all eight
inmates on death row had their sentences commuted to life in
prison. This was upsetting to some, as the list included
Jesse Timmendequas, whose rape and murder
of his 7-year-old neighbor, Megan Kanka, led to the creation of
Megan's Law, and many awaited his
execution.
In
New
York
, the New York State Court of
Appeals
ruled that the state's death penalty statute was
unconstitutional in June 2004, in
the case of People
v. LaValle.
In
Florida
, Governor
Jeb Bush suspended all executions on
December 15, 2006 after a botched execution required a second
injection of the lethal chemicals. The moratorium was
lifted on July 18, 2007 by Governor Charlie Crist, and on November 1, 2007, the
Florida
Supreme Court
unanimously upheld the state's lethal injection
procedures.
In
North
Carolina
, a de
facto moratorium is in place following a decision by the state's
medical board that physicians cannot participate in executions,
which is a requirement under state and federal law.
In
California
, U.S.
District Judge Jeremy Fogel imposed a moratorium on the death
penalty in the state of California
on December 15, 2006, ruling that the
implementation used in California was unconstitutional but that it
could be fixed.
In
Missouri
, U.S.
District Judge Fernando J. Gaitan, Jr. of the
United States District Court for the Western District of
Missouri in Kansas City
suspended the state's death penalty on June 26,
2006, after lengthy hearings on the matter. Judge Gaitan
reasoned that the state's lethal injection protocol did not satisfy
the Eighth Amendment because (1) the written procedures for
implementing lethal injections were too vague, and (2) the state
had no qualified anesthesiologist to perform lethal injections.
Jay
Nixon, the Missouri Attorney General, promptly appealed to the
United
States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in St.
Louis
. On June 4, 2007, a panel of the Eighth
Circuit reversed the District Court's decision. The death row
inmate in question, Michael Taylor, will seek an
en banc hearing before the entire Eighth
Circuit and, failing that, will seek a
writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court
of the United States. The Eighth Circuit case is number 06-3651,
Taylor v. Crawford.
In
Nebraska
, the Nebraska Supreme Court
ruled, on February 8, 2008, that the use of the
electric chair is unconstitutional —
specifically, that its use conflicts with the Nebraska State
Constitution. As electrocution was the sole
legally-authorized method of execution in Nebraska, the state had
what technically amounts to no legally-authorized death penalty,
until the introduction of lethal injection in that state in May
2009.
Since the
Supreme Court of the United
States
agreed to hear the case Baze v. Rees many states have slowed or halted
executions as lawyers for death-row prisoners have argued that
states should not carry out death sentences using a method that may
be ruled unconstitutional. While executions have come to an
apparent stop until
Baze is examined by the court, this
was not the intent, according to Supreme Court Justice
Antonin Scalia, who stated on Tuesday,
October 16, 2007 that stopping all executions by that method wasn't
the high court's intention when it agreed to hear
Baze v.
Rees. Just because the justices agreed to take on the
case, Scalia said, doesn't necessarily mean that a moratorium
should ensue.
On April 16, 2008, the U.S. Supreme Court decided in
Baze
that the current method of execution by lethal injection, by use of
a three-drug 'cocktail', is constitutionally permissible even
though an alternative method such as a massive overdose of some
other drug could be used and might be less painful or less
uncomfortable for the condemned. As a result of the court's
decision, some states that had instituted stays or moratoria have
announced a resumption of executions.
On November 25, 2009, the Kentucky Supreme Court Wednesday placed a
moratorium on executions until it adopts regulations for carrying
out the penalty by lethal
injection.http://www.kentucky.com/news/local/story/1035605.html
New developments
In 2010,
Kansas lawmakers are set to take up a
bill to abolish the death penalty because of cost. It was
introduced the year before by state Sen. Carolyn McGinn,
R-Sedgwick.http://www.kansas.com/crimecourts/story/1046044.html
Colorado might also abolish death penalty in the
near
future.http://coloradoindependent.com/41746/colorado-budget-woes-may-force-an-end-to-death-penalty
See also
External resources
Anti-death penalty
Pro-death penalty
Question of racial bias
More information
References
- [1]
- "Facts About the Death Penalty",
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/FactSheet.pdf, Death Penalty
Information Center, April 1, 2008
- execution since 1976
- Executions Slowed in 2008, But Numbers May Increase
in Coming Year
- [2]
- [3]
- American Justice Volume 1
- Letter - Cost of the Death Penalty
- STUDY: COST SAVINGS FROM REPEAL OF DEATH PENALTY MAY BE
ELUSIVE
- [4]
- Maria Medina, « Governor OK with Astorga capital case »
- [5]
- No serious chance of repeal in those states that are
actually using the death penalty
- AG Brown says he'll follow law on death
penalty
- lawmakers-cite-economic-crisis-effort-ban-death-penalty
- death penalty is not likely to end soon in US
- Death penalty repeal unlikely says anti-death penalty
activist
- [6]
- Information on States Without the Death
Penalty
- History of the Death Penalty - Faith in Action -
Working to Abolish the Death Penalty
- See Caitlin pp. 420-422
- New Mexico Abolishes Death Penalty (March 18th,
2009
- Espy file
- Department of Justice of the United States of
America
- The U.S. Military Death Penalty
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_A._Bennett
- Executions in the Military
- John T. Brennan, Ghosts of Newport: Spirits, Scoundrels,
Legends and Lore (The History Press, 2007), pg. 15 [7](accessed on Google Books on July 20,
2009)
-
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/list-defendants-mental-retardation-executed-united-states
- Death Penalty for Offenses Other Than Murder
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/article.php?&did=2347, Death
Penalty Information Center, 2008, accessed January 28, 2008
- Legislative Information
- Communications Office of California.
- The ESPY file for James Coburn
- "Child rapists can't be executed, Supreme Court rules",
http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/06/25/scotus.child.rape/index.html?eref=rss_topstories,
Bill Mears, CNN, June 25, 2008
- Supreme Court Rejects Death Penalty for Child
Rape
- http://www.lawskills.com/case/ga/id/1652/
-
http://www.dcor.state.ga.us/GDC/OffenderQuery/jsp/OffQryRedirector.jsp
Click "Offender Search" at the top. Search for "Sears, Demarcus" in
the name search.
- The Sad Story of Private Eddie Slovik
- See, e.g., Hill v. McDonough.
- See generally Separation of Powers.
- See, e.g., 18 U.S.C. § 3595. ("In a case in which a
sentence of death is imposed, the sentence shall be subject to
review by the court of appeals upon appeal by the defendant."
- See generally Appeal.
- 18 U.S.C. § 3595.
- Poland v. Arizona, 476 U.S. 147 152-54
(1986).
- See id.
- Eric M. Freedman, "Giarratano is a Scarecrow: The Right to
Counsel in State Postconviction Proceedings, Legalize Drugs" 91
Cornell L. Rev. 1079, 1097 (2006).
- Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288, 306 (1989).
- LaFave, Israel, & King, 6 Crim. Proc. § 28.11(b) (2d ed.
2007).
- LaFave, Israel, & King, 6 Crim. Proc. § 28.11(a) (2d ed.
2007).
- Eric M. Freedman, "Giarratano is a Scarecrow: The Right to
Counsel in State Postconviction Proceedings," 91 Cornell L. Rev.
1079, 1097 (2006).
- House v.
Bell, 126 S. Ct. 2064 (2006)
- Habeas Corpus Studies - New York Times
- frontline: the execution: readings: the new
speed-up in habeas corpus appeals
- Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477 (1994).
- The Espy File
- MSU website page on Death Penalty information
- Nebraska court bans the electric chair
- NY Times article: Electrocution Is Banned in Last
State to Rely on It
- Nebraska Supreme Court opinion
- Death Penalty Info Fact Sheet.
- NAACPLDF DRUSA, Spring 2006.
- State-by-state methods of execution. Retrieved
February 4, 2009.
- New Hampshire Laws, TITLE LXII: Criminal Code, Chapter 630:
Homicide, Section 630:5, Procedure in Capital Murder. – Clause XIV.
From statutes 1974, 34:10. 1977, 440:2. 1986, 82:1. 1990, 199:3,
eff. Jan. 1, 1991. Found at General Court of New Hamshire State Official
website. Retrieved February 4, 2009.
- Revised Code of Washington, RCW 10.95.180 (Title 10, Chapter
10.95, Section 10.95.180) "Death penalty — How executed." Found at
Washington State Legislature Official website.
Retrieved February 4, 2009.
- Best Web
- Juvenile News and Developments - Previous
Years
- Execution of Juveniles in the U.S. and other
Countries
- "Explaining Death Row's Population and Racial Composition,"
The Journal of Empirical Legal Studies John Blume,
Theodore Eisenberg and Martin Wells, March 2004, cited in Cornell Press release
- United States of America: Death by discrimination -
the continuing role of race in capital cases. | Amnesty
International
- Death Penalty in Black and White (1999 figures).
- [8])
- THE COLOR OF DEATH ROW
- Illinois Death Row Inmates Granted Commutation by Governor
George Ryan on January 12, 2003
- ClarkProsecutor
- ReligiousTolerance
- Experts Agree: Death Penalty Not A Deterrent To Violent Crime,
http://news.ufl.edu/1997/01/15/death1/, January 15, 1997, accessed
September 27, 2007
- "Suicide on death row", David Lester and Christine Tartaro,
Journal of Forensic Sciences, ISSN 0022-1198, 2002, vol.
47, no5, pp. 1108-1111
- Oprah
- Suburban Chicago News
- Press Enterprise
- Justice Policy
- New Jersey ADP
- JURIST - Paper Chase: Florida governor lifts
temporary ban on executions
- JURIST - Paper Chase: Florida Supreme Court upholds
state lethal injection procedure
- Judge says executions unconstitutional
- Court restores Missouri executions
The Kansas City Star, June 5, 2007.
- "Nebraska Supreme Court says electrocution
unconstitutional", Omaha World-Hearld (online
edition), February 8, 2008.
Further reading
- Banner, Stuart (2002). The Death Penalty: An American
History. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-00751-4.
- Delfino, Michelangelo and Mary E. Day. (2007). Death
Penalty USA 2005 - 2006 MoBeta Publishing, Tampa, Florida.
ISBN 978-0972514125; and Death Penalty USA 2003 - 2004
(2008). MoBeta Publishing, Tampa, Florida. ISBN
978-0972514132.
- Dow, David R., Dow, Mark (eds.) (2002). Machinery of
Death. The Reality of America's Death Penalty Regime.
Routledge, New York. ISBN 0-415-93266-1 (cloth), ISBN 0-415-93267-X
(paperback)
(this book provides critical perspectives on the death penalty; it
contains a foreword by Christopher
Hitchens)
- Megivern, James J., The Death Penalty: An Historical and
Theological Survey. Paulist Press, New York. ISBN
0-8091-0487-3
- Osler, Mark William (2009). Jesus on
Death Row: The Trial of Jesus and American Capital Punishment.
Abingdon Press. ISBN 978-0687647569
- Prejean, Helen (1993). Dead Man Walking. Random House. ISBN
0-679-75131-9 (paperback)
(Describes the case of death row convict Elmo Patrick Sonnier, while also giving
a general overview of issues connected to the Death
Penalty.)