Studies and Additional Resources
Studies - Previous Years
2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001-1998
Research on the Death Penalty - A collection of research that has been done on capital punishment, sorted by category.
State Studies The following list is a sample of recent state studies focusing on issues of the death penalty. Alabama Broken Justice: The Death Penalty in Alabama (2005) Arkansas Racial Sentencing Patterns in Arkansas (2008) Arizona California California Cost Study 2011 Death in Decline '09 (2009) The Hidden Death Tax (2009) Death by Geography (2008) The Impact of Legally Inappropriate Factors on Death Sentencing for California Homicides, 1990-1999 (2005) Colorado A new study, Colorado Capital Punishment: An Empirical Study (2013), conducted by law professors Justin Marceau and Sam Kamin of the University of Denver and Wanda Foglia of Rowan University found that the death penalty in Colorado is applied so rarely as to render the system unconstitutional. The authors concluded that Colorado's death penalty law is applicable to almost all first-degree murders, but is imposed so infrequently that it fails to provide the kind of careful narrowing of cases required by the Supreme Court in Furman v. Georgia (1972). In this groundbreaking study, the researchers reviewed all first-degree murder cases in the state between 1999 and 2010. They found that 92 percent of the 544 first-degree murder cases in that time span contained at least one aggravating factor that made the defendant eligible for the death penalty. However, prosecutors filed notices of intent to seek the death penalty in only 15 murder cases and pursued the death penalty at trial in only five of those cases — a 1% rate among death-eligible cases. The authors wrote, “Under the Colorado capital sentencing system, many defendants are eligible but almost none are actually sentenced to death. Because Colorado's aggravating factors so rarely result in actual death sentences, their use in any given case is a violation of the Eighth Amendment.” Connecticut Arbitrariness in Death Cases (2011) Delaware The Delaware Death Penalty: An Empirical Study (2012) Florida The Death Penalty in Florida (2009) Georgia A Matter of Life and Death (2007) Georgia Eyewitness Identification Procedures (2007) Thirty Years Analysis of Death Penalty Cases in Georgia (2005) Illinois Illinois Capital Reform Study Committee Final Report (2010) Illinois Commission on Capital Punishment (2005) Indiana Indiana Death Penalty Cost Study (2010) Kansas Kansas Judicial Council Death Penalty Advisory Committee Report (2004) Kansas Cost Study (2003) Kentucky Louisiana Diminishing All of Us: The Death Penalty in Louisiana (2012) Death Sentencing in East Baton Rouge Parish, 1990-2008 (2011) Maryland Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment Report (2008) Maryland Cost Study (2008) Missouri Missouri Death Penalty and Geography (2008) Life and Death Decisions: Prosecutorial Discretion and Capital Punishment in Missouri (2008) Nevada Nevada Cost Study 2012 New Hampshire Majority Report of the Commission to Study the Death Penalty in New Hampshire (2010) New Mexico The Application of the Death Penalty in New Mexico, July 1979 through December 2007: An Empirical Analysis (2008) North Carolina Racial Bias Study (2010) Potential Savings from Abolition of the Death Penalty in North Carolina (2009) The High Cost of the Death Penalty (2009) Mental Illness and the Death Penalty in North Carolina: A Diagnostic Approach (2007) Death Row Injustices (2006) Race and the Death Penalty in North Carolina An Empirical Analysis: 1993-1997 (2001) Ohio AP Ohio Study (2005) Pennsylvania In Life and Death, Costly Mistakes (2011) Report of the Advisory Committee on Wrongful Convictions (2011) Facts about Pennsylvania's Death Penalty (2009) Pennsylvania Supreme Court Committee on Racial and Gender Bias in the Justice System (1999) The Effect of Race, Gender, and Location on Prosecutorial Decision to Seek the Death Penalty in South Carolina (2006) Tennessee Tennessee Legislative Study Committee Recommendations (2009) Texas What's Messing with Texas Death Sentences? (2011) Convicting the Innocent: Texas Justice Derailed (2009) Too Much Cruelty, Too Little Clemency (2009) Legal Disparities in the Capital of Capital Punishment (2009) Status Disparities in the Capital of Capital Punishment (2009) Racial Disparities in the Capital of Capital Punishment (2008) A New Look at Race When Death Is Sought (2008) Eyewitness Identification Procedure in Texas (2008) Mental Illness and Executions in Texas (2007) Minimizing Risk, A Blueprint for Death Penalty Reform in Texas (2005) A State of Denial: Texas Justice and the Death Penalty (2000) Virginia A Vision for Justice (2005) Virginia Crime Lab Audit (2005) Washington Washington State Bar Report (2006)
The Death Penalty in Alabama: Judge Override (2011)
Study by the Equal Justice Initiative in Alabama exposing the practice of state judges imposing death sentences by overriding a jury's recommendation for life.
Alabama Death Penalty Assessment (2006)
Study by the American Bar Association's Death Penalty Moratorium Implementation Project found that Alabama's death penalty failed to meet fundamental ABA standards of fairness and accuracy.
Study by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), showing how structural and procedural flaws in Alabama’s criminal justice system stack the deck against fair trials and appropriate sentencing for those facing the death penalty.
A study by University of Iowa law professor David Baldus of the death penalty in Arkansas showing racial patterns in sentencing.
Arizona Death Penalty Assessment (2006)
Study by the American Bar Association's (ABA) Death Penalty Moratorium Implementation Project determining that Arizona's capital punishment laws are plagued with serious problems.
DPIC summary of "A roadmap to mend or end the California legislature's multi-billion dollar death penalty debacle" from Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review by Judge Arthur L. Alarcon & Paula M. Mitchell.
California's Death Penalty is Dead (2011)
Study by the ACLU of Northern California catalogs numerous intractable problems and waning public support which may lead to the end of capital punishment in the state.
A study by the ACLU of Northern California revealing that only three counties (Los Angeles, Orange, and Riverside) accounted for 83% of the state's death sentences in 2009.
A study by the ACLU of Northern California on the costs of the death penalty found additional expenses due to a net increase in the size of death row.
A study by the ACLU of Northern California examining the variation among California counties in seeking the death penalty.
A study by G. Pierce & M. Radelet published in the Santa Clara Law Review finding that the race of the victim in the underlying murder greatly affected whether a defendant would be sentenced to death.
Study by Professor John Donohue of Yale University's School of Law of death sentences in Connecticut finding that seeking the death penalty often correlated with the race of the victim and the defendant, and not necessarily with the severity of the crimes.
A five-year study of the operation of Delaware’s death penalty by Cornell law school.
An evaluation of Florida's death penalty by Christopher Slobogin, Professor of Law and Psychiatry at Vanderbilt University.
Florida Death Penalty Assessment (2006)
Study by the American Bar Association of Florida's death penalty system.
Study by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution of Georgia's use of the death penalty finding that "getting the death penalty in Georgia is as predictable as a lightning strike."
Study by the Georgia Innocence Project revealing that 83% of Georgia police agencies have no written rules on handling eyewitness identifications.
Georgia Death Penalty Assessment Report (2006)
Study by the American Bar Association Death Penalty Moratorium Implementation Project found that Georgia's death penalty fails to meet 43 ABA standards for improving the fairness and accuracy of the death penalty.
Study by the Georgia Public Defender Standards Council analyzing death penalty cases in the state from 1973 - 2003.
Sixth and final report of the committee created by the state legislature in 2003 and headed by Thomas P. Sullivan, a former U.S. Attorney.
Study by the Commission, aiming to address problems Illinois Governor George Ryan identified two years prior, including potential safeguards to prevent the possible conviction and execution of innocent inmates.
A state analysis of the costs of the death penalty in Indiana finding the average cost to a county for a trial and direct appeal in a capital case to be over ten times more than a life-without-parole case.
Indiana Death Penalty Assessment (2007)
Study by the American Bar Association calling for a halt to executions in the state because of concerns about the arbitrariness of the state's death penalty.
Study by the committee examining the state's application of capital punishment and the hefty price tag of seeking the death penalty.
Study by the Kansas government detailing the disparity in cost between death penalty cases and non-death penalty cases in Kansas.
Kentucky Assessment on the Death Penalty (2011)
ABA study analyzing various laws, rules, procedures, standards, and guidelines relating to the administration of capital punishment in Kentucky.
A recent study published by the Jesuit Social Research Institute of Loyola University pointed to numerous problems with Louisiana’s death penalty.
A study conducted by Professors Glenn Pierce and Michael Radelet published in the Lousiana Law Review showing that the odds of a death sentence in parts of Louisiana were 2.6 times higher for those charged with killing a white victim than for those charged with killing a black victim.
Study by the legislative commission established to examine the death penalty in Maryland recommending abolition of the punishment.
Study by the Urban Institute detailing the disparity in cost between death penalty cases and non-death penalty cases in Maryland.
Missouri Death Penalty Assessment (2012)
Study by the American Bar Association's (ABA) Death Penalty Moratorium Implementation Project determining that Missouri's capital punishment laws are plagued with serious problems.
Study by Prof. David Sloss of the St. Louis University School of Law showing that the chance of a death sentence appears to rest on what part of the state the crime was committed in.
A study by Katherine Barnes of Arizona University Law School, and David Sloss and Stephen Thaman of St. Louis Univeristy Law School, studying 1046 cases of intentional homicide in Missouri to determine geographical and racial effects in the rates at which prosecutors seek the death penalty.
A study by Dr. Terance Miethe of the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of Nevada on the costs of the death penalty in Nevada.
A study by a New Hampshire commission evaluating the use of the death penalty within the state.
A study by attorney Marcia Wilson revealing information on how the death penalty was applied in New Mexico after its reinstatement.
The Death Penalty in North Carolina: A Summary of the Data and Scientific Studies (2011)
A comprehensive review of studies on the death penalty by Matthew Robinson, Professor of Government and Justice Studies at Appalachian State University.
Excessive Sentencing in North Carolina (2010)
Study by Professor Frank Baumgartner showing that most of those originally condemned to death in North Carolina eventually received lesser sentences when their cases were concluded.
A study by Professors Michael Radelet and Glenn Pierce found that the odds of a defendant receiving a death sentence in North Carolina were three times higher if the person was convicted of killing a white person than if he had killed a black person.
A study published by a Duke University economist revealing that North Carolina could save $11 million annually if it dropped the death penalty.
A study by the Independent Weekly showing that North Carolina conservatively spent at least $36 million dollars by seeking the death penalty instead of life in prison without parole over a seven year span.
Study by the Charlotte School of Law revealing that obstacles entrenched within the criminal justice system impede efforts to identify those with severe mental illness and treat them fairly.
Study by the Common Sense Foundation of North Carolina finding that at least 37 people on death row had trial lawyers who would not have met minimum standards of qualification at the time of the study.
A study by Professor Jack Boger and presented by The Common Sense Foundation North Carolina Council of Churches.
Ohio Death Penalty Assessment Report (2007)
Study by the American Bar Association stating that Ohio's capital punishment system is so flawed that it should be suspended while the state conducts a thorough review of its fairness and accuracy.
Study by the Associated Press of 1,936 indictments reported to the Ohio Supreme Court by Ohio counties with capital cases from October 1981 through 2002 finding that capital punishment has been applied in an uneven and often arbitrary fashion.
Study by the Philadelphia Inquirer of death penalty appeals in Pennsylvania spanning three decades, finding a pattern of ineffective assistance by defense attorneys.
A study by the Pennsylvania Advisory Committee on Wrongful Convictions identifying the most common causes of wrongful convictions and any current laws and procedures implicated in each type of causation.
Study by the Associated Press showing the state goes through the expensive and time-consuming process of trying many death penalty cases and fighting appeals, but almost all cases end with a life sentence.
Pennsylvania Death Penalty Assessment Report (2007)
Study by the American Bar Association (ABA) showing that flaws in Pennsylvania's death penalty system are so pervasive that the state risks executing an innocent person.
Study by the Committee, making a series of 23 recommendations to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, to the Legislature, to the state's Attorney General and District Attorneys, and to Governor Ed Rendell.
Study of homicide cases in South Carolina by Professor Isaac Unah of the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill and attorney Michael Songer finding that prosecutors were more likely to seek the death penalty when the victim in the underlying murder was white, if the victim was female, and when the crime occurred in a rural area of the state.
A 16-month analysis of the state’s capital punishment process by the committee with recommendations for achieving a more fair and accurate system
Tennessee Death Penalty Assessment (2007)
Study by the ABA detailing racial and geographic disparities in capital cases, poorly trained defense attorneys, heavy caseloads for those representing defedants, and inadequate procedures to address innocence claims.
Regulating Death in the Lone Star State (2011)
A study by the ACLU of Texas and Northwestern University's Center for International Human Rights revealing that procedures for euthanizing animals in the state are more carefully regulated than the protocol for executing death row inmates.
Study analyzing the decline of death sentencing in Texas by David McCord
A study by The Justice Project analyzing the cases of 39 innocent Texans who collectively spent more than 500 years in prison for crimes they did not commit.
A study by Amnesty International examining many of the nearly 200 executions that have occurred during Governor Rick Perry’s term in office.
A study that reveals disparities in who receives the death penalty in Texas by Scott Phillips, a professor at the Department of Sociology and Criminology at the University of Denver.
A study by Scott Phillips, a sociology and criminology professor at the University of Denver, published in the Law & Society Review focusing on the imposition of death sentences in relation to the victim's social status.
A study by Prof. Scott Phillips of the University of Denver exploring the relationship of race to death sentencing in Harris County (Houston), Texas.
A study by Professor Scott Phillips of the Univeristy of Denver found that black defendants in Houston, Texas, are more likely to be sentenced to death than white defendants, even when other variables are accounted for.
A study by the Justice Project concerning criminal justice procedures in Texas.
Study conducted by the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) has revealing that Texas is almost last among states in spending on mental health services and performs poorly in other mental health areas, while executing many inmates with serious mental illness.
Study by the Texas Defender Service calling for substantial changes in the way Texas handles capital murder cases.
A study by the Texas Defender Service.
Study by the Innocence Commission for Virginia of 11 wrongful conviction cases in Virginia finding that mistaken eyewitness identification is the major reason innocent people have been convicted in the state.
Study by the American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors finding that the Virginia lab's internal review process was flawed and that labs had botched DNA tests.
Study by the Death Penalty Subcommittee of the Committee on Public Defense of the Washington State Bar on the state's death penalty.
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LATEST NEWS (May 22): Colorado's governor indefinitely stayed the execution of
(May 14). A bill to repeal Nebraska's death penalty was not able to overcome a filibuster vote and will not be voted on this year. The vote to end the filibuster was 28-21, but 33 votes were needed. This was the first time since 1979 that a majority of 


A report, released on April 18, 2012, by the prestigious National Research Council of the National Academies and based on a review of more than three decades of research, concluded that studies claiming a deterrent effect on murder rates from the death penalty are fundamentally flawed. The report concluded: “The committee concludes that research to date on the effect of capital punishment on homicide is not informative about whether capital punishment decreases, increases, or has no effect on homicide rates. Therefore, the committee recommends that these studies not be used to inform deliberations requiring judgments about the effect of the death penalty on homicide. Consequently, claims that research demonstrates that capital punishment decreases or increases the homicide rate by a specified amount or has no effect on the homicide rate should not influence policy judgments about capital punishment." (emphasis added). Criminologist Daniel Nagin of Carnegie Mellon, who chaired the panel of experts, said, “We recognize this conclusion will be controversial to some, but nobody is well served by unfounded claims about the death penalty. Nothing is known about how potential murderers actually perceive their risk of punishment."




