A recent edi­to­r­i­al in the Dallas Morning News recalled that the paper had reversed its posi­tion in sup­port of the death penal­ty in April 2007. Since then, the edi­to­r­i­al not­ed, Texas has account­ed for an even larg­er per­cent­age of the coun­try’s exe­cu­tions, but also that there are signs the use of the death penal­ty is declin­ing even in Texas. The paper high­light­ed the 55 exon­er­a­tions from death row in this decade as a 25% increase from last decade, and the sharp decline in the num­ber of death sen­tences com­pared to ten years ago. These are all signs that courts, pros­e­cu­tors, politi­cians and the pub­lic are rec­og­niz­ing the prob­lems in our imper­fect sys­tem of jus­tice,” the edi­to­r­i­al states. This news­pa­per feels more strong­ly than ever that those flaws are suf­fi­cient­ly wide­spread that the jus­tice sys­tem can­not be trust­ed to impose irre­versible sen­tences of death.” Read the full editorial below.

Editorial: A decade of progress on death penalty justice

In April 2007, when this news­pa­per reversed its long-held sup­port for the death penal­ty, we lament­ed the fact that while the nation was mov­ing away from the death penal­ty, Texas seemed to be cling­ing to it more tightly.

We not­ed then that our state had car­ried out slight­ly more than a third of all the exe­cu­tions in this coun­try. In the past two years, it’s got­ten worse. Texas accounts for almost half of all U.S. exe­cu­tions. Increasingly, the Lone Star State stands alone.

But as we look back at 2009 and the decade as a whole, we also see few­er new pris­on­ers sent to death row. Texas juries sen­tenced pris­on­ers to death only nine times this year, the low­est num­ber since cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was rein­sti­tut­ed in 1976.

That is not the result of a major decrease in cap­i­tal crimes. The mur­der rate, unfor­tu­nate­ly, has remained steady.

This news­pa­per does­n’t think it’s coin­ci­den­tal that few­er death sen­tences are being doled out at the tail end of a decade that saw a record num­ber of death row exon­er­a­tions. According to the Death Penalty Information Center, 55 peo­ple walked free from death row this decade after poten­tial­ly dead­ly mis­takes were found in their cas­es. That’s a 25 per­cent increase over the 1990s.

That’s cer­tain­ly part of the rea­son why only 106 peo­ple nation­wide were sen­tenced to death in 2009, about a third as many as in 1999.

Changes in the law also have played a role. It’s hard to imag­ine that, at the start of this decade, it was legal to exe­cute peo­ple for crimes they com­mit­ted as chil­dren, to exe­cute the men­tal­ly retard­ed and to bring racial bias­es into jury-selection processes.

The Supreme Court right­ed those wrongs and, for the first time, estab­lished that post-con­vic­tion DNA evi­dence could be con­sid­ered in the appeals process. And in Texas, life with­out parole – or death by prison,” as we like to call it – final­ly became an option for juries.

These are all signs that courts, pros­e­cu­tors, politi­cians and the pub­lic are rec­og­niz­ing the prob­lems in our imper­fect sys­tem of jus­tice. This news­pa­per feels more strong­ly than ever that those flaws are suf­fi­cient­ly wide­spread that the jus­tice sys­tem can­not be trust­ed to impose irre­versible sen­tences of death.

And there is much work to be done. Efforts to bring con­sis­ten­cy to eye­wit­ness evi­dence stalled in the Texas Legislature. The gov­er­nor has obstruct­ed the Texas Forensic Science Commission’s work to exam­ine the Cameron Todd Willingham arson case. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, under the lead­er­ship of Sharon Keller, con­tin­ues to deliv­er on her elec­tion promise to deliv­er pro-pros­e­cu­tion” decisions.

But the num­ber of exon­er­a­tions is up, and the num­ber of death sen­tences is down. The U.S. – includ­ing Texas – begins a new decade head­ed in the right direction.

(“Editorial: A decade of progress on death penal­ty jus­tice,” Dallas Morning News, December 24, 2009). See Editorials. See also Innocence and Sentencing.

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