Records obtained by the Bay Area News Group in California show that the appeal costs for the last two men exe­cut­ed in the state were $1.76 mil­lion. At that rate, the cost of car­ry­ing out the exe­cu­tions of the 724 inmates still on death row could exceed $700 mil­lion if the death penal­ty is not repealed in November. Records show that the state and fed­er­al appeals for Clarence Ray Allen, the old­est and most recent death row inmate exe­cut­ed in the state, cost more than $761,000. Appeals for Stanley Tookie” Williams cost the pub­lic near­ly $1 mil­lion. These costs do not include the state’s expens­es in defend­ing the con­vic­tions, the tri­al costs, or the extra costs attrib­uted to death-row incar­cer­a­tion. If the death penal­ty is repealed by bal­lot ini­tia­tive in November, some of the mon­ey saved will be used for pur­su­ing unsolved cas­es. Moreover, those con­vict­ed of mur­der will be required to work and make com­pen­sa­tion to vic­tims’ fam­i­lies. Carlos Moreno, who reviewed such appeals as both a California Supreme Court jus­tice and Los Angeles fed­er­al judge said it would not be easy to reduce the costs: That’s what it costs,” Moreno said. I’ve seen it. I don’t think we’re over­ly gen­er­ous.” Jeanne Woodford, a for­mer war­den at the San Quentin prison where death row is housed, said, We’re spend­ing this amount of mon­ey for a hand­ful of peo­ple and it does­n’t real­ly do any­thing for public safety.”

In 2011, a study co-authored by fed­er­al appeals court Judge Arthur Alarcon found that California tax­pay­ers have spent rough­ly $4 bil­lion on the death penal­ty since its rein­state­ment in 1978. In April, an ini­tia­tive that would replace the death penal­ty with life with­out parole qual­i­fied for the November bal­lot. The ini­tia­tive, SAFE California, would redi­rect $30 mil­lion a year for three years in esti­mat­ed sav­ings from repeal­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment toward law enforce­ment efforts to inves­ti­gate unsolved rape and murder cases.

(H. Mintz, The cost of California’s death penal­ty,” San Jose Mercury News, May 5, 2012). See Costs. Listen to DPIC’s pod­cast on Costs.

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