Although Connecticut abol­ished the death penal­ty for future offens­es in 2012, eleven inmates remained on death row. Now an unusu­al tri­al will soon begin chal­leng­ing the death sen­tences of sev­en of those inmates, not because of the leg­is­la­ture’s repeal action, but because of evi­dence of racial and geo­graph­i­cal bias­es in decid­ing those sen­tences. The inmates will prin­ci­pal­ly rely on a study by Stanford University pro­fes­sor John Donohue, who reviewed near­ly 4,700 mur­ders in the state from 1973 to 2007. The study found that minor­i­ty defen­dants whose vic­tims were white were three times more like­ly to receive a death sen­tence than white defen­dants whose vic­tims were white. Professor Donahue also found dis­par­i­ties along geo­graph­ic lines. For exam­ple, death penal­ty-eli­gi­ble defen­dants in Waterbury, Connectiuct, were sen­tenced to death at much high­er rates than sim­i­lar defen­dants else­where in the state. The study con­clud­ed, A com­pre­hen­sive assess­ment of this process … reveals a trou­bling pic­ture. Overall, the state’s record of han­dling death-eli­gi­ble cas­es rep­re­sents a chaot­ic and unsound crim­i­nal jus­tice pol­i­cy that serves nei­ther deter­rence nor retribution.”

Of the 11 men who were on Connecticut’s death row when the death penal­ty was abol­ished, 6 were black, 4 were white and 1 was Hispanic. Of their 15 vic­tims, 10 were white, 4 were black and 1 was Hispanic.

(D. Collins, Trial chal­leng­ing Conn.‘s death penal­ty to begin,” Associated Press, September 3, 2012). See Arbitrariness and Race. Listen to DPIC’s pod­casts on Arbitrariness and on Race.

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