An edi­to­r­i­al in the Sunday edi­tion of the New York Times on January 8 looked at recent stud­ies point­ing to the arbi­trari­ness of the death penal­ty. The edi­to­r­i­al not­ed that the U.S. Supreme Court had struck down cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1972 because its arbi­trary imple­men­ta­tion ren­dered it uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. In par­tic­u­lar, the Times cit­ed a recent study of Connecticut’s death penal­ty indi­cat­ing the death penal­ty was not being imposed on the worst offend­ers, but rather that a death sen­tence depend­ed on var­i­ous irrel­e­vant fac­tors such as geog­ra­phy and the race of the vic­tim. The study was con­duct­ed by Prof. John Donohue of Stanford Law School, who ana­lyzed 205 death-eli­gi­ble cas­es in the state over a 34-year peri­od and found those fac­ing exe­cu­tion are indis­tin­guish­able from equal­ly vio­lent offend­ers who escaped the penal­ty of death. According to the edi­to­r­i­al: The egre­gious­ness scores for those charged with cap­i­tal mur­der and those who were not were vir­tu­al­ly iden­ti­cal; the nature of the crime bore almost no rela­tion­ship to how the case came out. Among the 29 who had a death penal­ty hear­ing, there is no clear dif­fer­ence in the lev­el of egre­gious­ness for the 17 who got life with­out parole and the 12 sen­tenced to death … Among the 32 most awful cas­es on the four-fac­tor egre­gious­ness scale, only one result­ed in a death sen­tence.” The edi­to­r­i­al not­ed, In 1972, the Supreme Court in Furman v. Georgia struck down state death-penal­ty laws that lacked guide­lines on how the penal­ty should be applied. It found that with only 15 per­cent of death-eli­gi­ble mur­der con­vic­tions in Georgia lead­ing to a death sen­tence, impo­si­tion of the penal­ty was freak­ish­ly’ rare — and there­fore arbi­trary and uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. The rate in the Donohue study is far more extreme at 4.4 per­cent.” The edi­to­r­i­al con­clud­ed, This freak­ish­ly’ rare appli­ca­tion — among the thou­sands of mur­der cas­es a year — is strong evi­dence that every state sys­tem is arbi­trary and capri­cious. The death penal­ty in Connecticut is clear­ly uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, bar­bar­ic and should be abol­ished, as it should be every­where.” Read full edi­to­r­i­al below.


January 8, 2012
The Random Horror of the Death Penalty

By Lincoln Caplan

The Supreme Court has not banned cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, as it should, but it has long held that the death penal­ty is uncon­sti­tu­tion­al if ran­dom­ly imposed on a hand­ful of peo­ple. An impor­tant new study based on cap­i­tal cas­es in Connecticut pro­vides pow­er­ful evi­dence that death sen­tences are hap­haz­ard­ly met­ed out, with vir­tu­al­ly no con­nec­tion to the heinous­ness of the crime.

A num­ber of stud­ies in the last three decades have shown that black defen­dants are more like­ly to be sen­tenced to death if their vic­tim is white rather than black. But defend­ers of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment often respond to those stud­ies by argu­ing that the worst of the worst” are sen­tenced to death because their crimes are the most egregious.

The Connecticut study, con­duct­ed by John Donohue, a Stanford law pro­fes­sor, com­plete­ly dis­pels this erro­neous rea­son­ing. It ana­lyzed all mur­der cas­es in Connecticut over a 34-year peri­od and found that inmates on death row are indis­tin­guish­able from equal­ly vio­lent offend­ers who escape that penal­ty. It shows that the process in Connecticut — sim­i­lar to those in oth­er death-penal­ty states — is utter­ly arbi­trary and discriminatory.

From 1973, when Connecticut passed a death penal­ty law, to 2007, 4,686 mur­ders were com­mit­ted in the state. Of those, 205 were death-eli­gi­ble cas­es (cap­i­tal mur­ders that include the killing of a police offi­cer, mur­der for hire, mur­der-rape and mur­der com­mit­ted dur­ing a kid­nap­ping) that result­ed in some kind of con­vic­tion, either through a plea bar­gain or con­vic­tion at tri­al. The arbi­trari­ness start­ed at the charg­ing lev­el: near­ly a third of these death-eli­gi­ble cas­es were not charged as cap­i­tal offens­es as they could have been, but as less­er crimes. Sixty-six defen­dants were con­vict­ed of cap­i­tal mur­der, 29 went to a hear­ing for a death sen­tence, nine death sen­tences were sus­tained and one per­son was executed.

Why was this small group of defen­dants sin­gled out for death? Did their crimes make them more deserv­ing of exe­cu­tion than all the others?

To get answers, Professor Donohue designed an egre­gious­ness” rat­ings sys­tem to com­pare all 205 cas­es. It con­sid­ered four fac­tors: vic­tim suf­fer­ing (like dura­tion of pain); vic­tim char­ac­ter­is­tics (like age, vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty); defendant’s cul­pa­bil­i­ty (motive, intox­i­ca­tion or pre­med­i­ta­tion); and the num­ber of vic­tims. He enlist­ed stu­dents from two law schools to rate each case (based on fact sum­maries with­out reveal­ing the case’s out­come or the race of the defen­dant or vic­tim) on a scale from 1 to 3 (most egre­gious) for each of the four fac­tors. The raters also gave each case an over­all sub­jec­tive assess­ment of egre­gious­ness, from 1 (low) to 5 (high), to ensure that more gen­er­al reac­tions could be captured.

The egre­gious­ness scores for those charged with cap­i­tal mur­der and those who were not were vir­tu­al­ly iden­ti­cal; the nature of the crime bore almost no rela­tion­ship to how the case came out. Among the 29 who had a death penal­ty hear­ing, there is no clear dif­fer­ence in the lev­el of egre­gious­ness for the 17 who got life with­out parole and the 12 sen­tenced to death (three even­tu­al­ly had their sen­tences vacat­ed for var­i­ous rea­sons). Among the 32 most awful cas­es on the four-fac­tor egre­gious­ness scale, only one result­ed in a death sentence.

Rather than pun­ish the worst crim­i­nals, the Connecticut sys­tem, Professor Donohue found, oper­ates with arbi­trari­ness and dis­crim­i­na­tion.” The racial effect is very evi­dent (minor­i­ty defen­dants with white vic­tims were far more like­ly to be sen­tenced to death than oth­ers), as is geo­graph­ic dis­par­i­ty. In the city of Waterbury, a death-eli­gi­ble killer was at least sev­en times as like­ly to be sen­tenced to death as in the rest of the state.

In 1972, the Supreme Court in Furman v. Georgia struck down state death-penal­ty laws that lacked guide­lines on how the penal­ty should be applied. It found that with only 15 per­cent of death-eli­gi­ble mur­der con­vic­tions in Georgia lead­ing to a death sen­tence, impo­si­tion of the penal­ty was freak­ish­ly” rare — and there­fore arbi­trary and uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. The rate in the Donohue study is far more extreme at 4.4 percent.

The court also said in Furman that a death-penal­ty sys­tem must have a mean­ing­ful basis for dis­tin­guish­ing the few cas­es in which it is imposed from the many cas­es in which it is not.” Clearly, Connecticut’s sys­tem fails this require­ment. Because it’s a small state, Professor Donohue was able to con­duct a com­pre­hen­sive study of every cap­i­tal mur­der case with a con­vic­tion. But Connecticut’s lessons also apply to big­ger states, like California, Texas and Ohio, where pros­e­cu­tors even in neigh­bor­ing coun­ties use dras­ti­cal­ly dif­fer­ent fac­tors to impose the death penalty.

In 2011, the num­ber of new death sen­tences imposed in the United States fell by 25 per­cent to 78, the low­est num­ber since cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was rein­stat­ed in 1976. This freak­ish­ly” rare appli­ca­tion — among the thou­sands of mur­der cas­es a year — is strong evi­dence that every state sys­tem is arbi­trary and capri­cious. The death penal­ty in Connecticut is clear­ly uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, bar­bar­ic and should be abol­ished, as it should be everywhere.

(L. Caplan, The Random Horror of the Death Penalty,” New York Times, edi­to­r­i­al, January 8, 2012). See Arbitrariness and Studies. See also DPIC’s recent report on arbi­trari­ness, Struck by Lightning” and DPIC’s Year End Report, not­ing the declin­ing use of the death penal­ty. Read more Editorials on the death penalty.

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