Philadelphia, Pennsylvaniathe nation’s third largest death-penal­ty coun­ty—has elect­ed as its new dis­trict attor­ney a can­di­date who ran on a plat­form of end­ing mass incar­cer­a­tion and eschew­ing use of the death penal­ty. Democrat Lawrence Krasner (pic­tured), a long­time civ­il rights lawyer and oppo­nent of the death penal­ty, who once joked that he’d spent a career becom­ing com­plete­ly une­lec­table,” received 75% of the vote in eas­i­ly defeat­ing his Republican oppo­nent Beth Grossman. As a civ­il rights and crim­i­nal defense attor­ney, Krasner had rep­re­sent­ed polit­i­cal pro­test­ers and Black Lives Matter activists, and had sued the Philadelphia Police Department on numer­ous occa­sions. He has likened use of the death penal­ty to light­ing mon­ey on fire,” say­ing that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment has cost Pennsylvania tax­pay­ers over $1 bil­lion, yet no one on Pennsylvania’s death row has been put to death invol­un­tar­i­ly since 1962.” A July 2015 DPIC analy­sis of death sen­tences imposed in Philadelphia report­ed that at least 148 death sen­tences imposed in the city since Pennsylvania rein­sti­tut­ed the death penal­ty in 1974 had been over­turned. In that time, one pris­on­er from Philadelphia — who vol­un­tar­i­ly dropped his appeals — was exe­cut­ed. Krasner called his elec­tion a man­date” for trans­for­ma­tion­al change.” He said, “[t]his is a sto­ry about a move­ment. And this is a move­ment that is tired of see­ing a sys­tem that has sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly picked on poor peo­ple — pri­mar­i­ly black and brown poor peo­ple.” Those are the peo­ple who, his­tor­i­cal­ly, have been most dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly affect­ed by Philadelphia’s death penal­ty. A major study of Philadelphia’s death penal­ty in the 1980s and 1990s doc­u­ment­ed that black cap­i­tal defen­dants faced more than triple the odds of being sen­tenced to death than did oth­er defen­dants, and that an esti­mat­ed one-third of the more than 100 African Americans who were on the city’s death row at the turn of the cen­tu­ry would have received life sen­tences but for their race. Another study showed that death-sen­tenc­ing in the city was heav­i­ly influ­enced by a defen­dan­t’s phys­i­cal appear­ance: the prob­a­bil­i­ty that a black defen­dant charged with killing a white vic­tim would be sen­tenced to death dou­bled if the defen­dant was per­ceived as hav­ing stereo­typ­i­cal­ly African” phys­i­cal fea­tures — dark­er skin, a broad­er nose, and thick­er lips. Even as the num­ber of death sen­tences imposed in Philadelphia has dra­mat­i­cal­ly declined—falling from an aver­age of 9.9 death sen­tences per year in the 1990s to less than one sen­tence per year this decade—the racial dis­pro­por­tion­al­i­ty of the death sen­tences imposed in the city has grown. Nine of the 99 death sen­tences imposed in Philadelphia in the 1990s were direct­ed at white defen­dants, as com­pared to only one of the 25 death sen­tences imposed this cen­tu­ry, and 45 of the last 47 peo­ple sen­tenced to death in the city have been defen­dants of color. 

(C. Brennan and A. Whelan, Larry Krasner wins race for Philly DA,” Philadelphia Inquirer, November 7, 2017; H. Otterbein, Completely Unelectable” Progressive Larry Krasner Wins DA’s Race,” Philadelphia Magazine, November 7, 2017; J. Kopp, Progressive Larry Krasner eas­i­ly wins Philly’s dis­trict attor­ney race,” Philly Voice, November 7, 2017; R. Dunham, Philadelphia Death Row (by date),” Death Penalty Information Center, December 10, 2016; R. Dunham, Pennsylvania Capital Case Summary of Grounds for Reversal (Philadelphia),” Death Penalty Information Center, July 30, 2015.) See Costs, New Voices, and Race.

Citation Guide