Death Penalty Information
Center shows little has change when it comes to race and the death penalty.
Race of Defendants Executed
White: 767
• Black: 468
• Hispanic: 107
•
Other: 24
Race
if Victims in Death Penalty Cases
Over 75% of
the murder victims in cases resulting in an execution
were white, even though nationally only 50% of
murder victims generally
are white.
In Louisiana, the odds of a
death sentence were 97% higher
for those whose victim was white than for those whose
victim was black. (Pierce & Radelet, Louisiana Law
Review, 2011).
A
study in California found that those who killed whites where
over 3 times more likely to be sentenced to death than
those who killed blacks and over 4 times more likely than
those who killed Latinos. (Pierce & Radelet, Santa Clara
Law Review, 2005).
A
comprehensive study of the death penalty in North Carolina
found that the odds of receiving a death sentence rose by 3.5 times among those
defendants whose victims
where white. (Prof. Jack Boger and Dr. Isaac Unah, University of North
Carolina, 2001).
In
96% of states where there have been reviews of race and the death penalty,
there was a pattern of either race-of-victim
or race-of-defendant discrimination, or both. (Prof. Baldus report to the ABA,
1998).
98% of the chief district attorneys in death penalty states are white; only 1%
are black. (Prof. Jeffrey Pokorak,
Cornell Law Review, 1998). It has been proven that the death penalty is not a deterrence to crime, so why are we still killing people (primarily minorities) if it is not working to reduce crimes?

Erma, this is very interesting. I am currently doing research for my presentation, and I am finding out exactly the same thing. It seems there is bias against African Americans not only when they are the defendant, but also when they are the victims. I think this situation is more prevalent is some states (Texas, Alabama and Florida) than it is in others. The thing that disturbs me most about this bias is that there is still people in this country that don’t see this as a problem.
ReplyDeleteErma: You have written a thought-provoking blog on Jim Crow justice. Professor Taylor
ReplyDelete