In a new arti­cle from Bolts, jour­nal­ist Daniel Nichanian writes about the dearth of can­di­dates in Ohio’s coun­ty pros­e­cu­tor elec­tions. Of the 27 coun­ties with more than 100,000 res­i­dents in Ohio, 70 per­cent drew just one can­di­date” to run for elec­tion or reelec­tion as coun­ty pros­e­cu­tor. Only 15 of Ohio’s 88 pros­e­cu­tor elec­tions this year drew mul­ti­ple can­di­dates by the December dead­line, accord­ing to Bolts’ research: This means that the vast major­i­ty of the state’s pros­e­cut­ing attor­neys are run­ning unop­posed this year; Bolts has con­firmed that no more than one can­di­date has filed to run in 73 of the 88 counties.” 

Uncontested elec­tions can sug­gest sta­bil­i­ty and sat­is­fac­tion with the incum­bent, but they also prompt a dis­cus­sion about the dynam­ics of elec­toral com­pe­ti­tion and have broad­er impli­ca­tions for demo­c­ra­t­ic account­abil­i­ty. For exam­ple, Bolts reports that although many Ohio pros­e­cu­tors have faced seri­ous mis­con­duct charges, there have been no con­se­quences from state offi­cials. These same pros­e­cu­tors are run­ning unop­posed in upcom­ing elec­tions, pro­vid­ing no incen­tives to change their poli­cies or inves­ti­gate their own mistakes.

In their 2021 study, Ronald F. Wright, Jeffrey L. Yates, and Carissa Byrne Hessick describe a grow­ing inter­est in and atten­tion to the roles of pros­e­cu­tors, reflect­ing broad­er changes in the polit­i­cal and social land­scape sur­round­ing crim­i­nal jus­tice issues, which they argue can con­tribute to strength­en­ing democ­ra­cy. According to Gregory DeAngelo and Bryan C. McCannon, sev­er­al states are recon­sid­er­ing the prac­tice of list­ing polit­i­cal par­ty affil­i­a­tions on bal­lots. Among oth­er obser­va­tions, they note that more par­ti­san can­di­dates tend to spend more mon­ey on the cam­paign trail due to fund­ing avail­abil­i­ty, disadvantaging challengers. 

There are many rea­sons explain­ing the lack ofchal­lengers, includ­ing fundrais­ing pres­sures, ger­ry­man­der­ing, gen­er­al elec­tion fatigue, and the increas­ing polar­iza­tion of vot­ers with­in the polit­i­cal land­scape, as Mr. Nichanian explains. There are also racial and gen­der bias­es that affect races, and the pos­si­bil­i­ty of retal­i­a­tion, all of which may deter poten­tial can­di­dates. Whatever the rea­son, when incum­bents are not chal­lenged, estab­lished prac­tices remain in place and the account­abil­i­ty that is essen­tial in a healthy demo­c­ra­t­ic process suf­fers. Political sci­en­tists cat­e­go­rize uncon­test­ed elec­tions as a symp­tom of what is often labeled demo­c­ra­t­ic ero­sion.’ Nancy Bermeo, a polit­i­cal sci­en­tist work­ing at Princeton and Oxford uni­ver­si­ties, defines demo­c­ra­t­ic ero­sion, or demo­c­ra­t­ic back­slid­ing,’ as the weak­en­ing of the polit­i­cal insti­tu­tions that under­pin the exist­ing democ­ra­cy and/​or its checks and balances. 

The cur­rent occu­pant of Ohio’s Trumbull County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, Dennis Watkins, has been in office since 1984 and remains unchal­lenged in this elec­tion cycle. As report­ed in Bolts, Mr. Watkins has nev­er faced a chal­lenger in any of his oth­er nine reelec­tion bids. Despite an Ohio law exclud­ing peo­ple with seri­ous men­tal ill­ness from death penal­ty eli­gi­bil­i­ty, he has fought to keep peo­ple with men­tal ill­ness on death row. In 2019, he also defend­ed a pros­e­cu­tor in his office who fre­quent­ly mocked defen­dants with crude pub­lic jokes, dis­miss­ing ethics concerns. 

Mr. Watkins, along with his Assistant, Christopher Becker, have tena­cious­ly pur­sued cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in their juris­dic­tion— assert­ing that the death penal­ty should not be viewed as a deter­rent, but as pun­ish­ment for the most vio­lent and destruc­tive mem­bers of soci­ety.” Andre Kokomo” Williams appealed the death sen­tence secured by Mr. Watkins in 1991, argu­ing that his intel­lec­tu­al dis­abil­i­ty made him inel­i­gi­ble for the death penal­ty. On December 11, 2023, the Eleventh District Court of Appeals in Ohio agreed. In her 51-page deci­sion, District Judge Mary Jane Trapp wrote that the tri­al court exclud­ed and/​or failed to address evi­dence that sup­port a find­ing Mr. Williams is intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled” (Mahoning Matters, 2023). Prosecutor Watkins stat­ed that, regard­less, he intends to under­take an appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court seek­ing to have the tri­al court’s opin­ion rein­stat­ed,’ which would reopen the path to Mr. Williams’s execution. 

Figure 1. Chart of Trumbull County Death Sentences from 1984 to 2023

According to the DPIC Death Penalty Census Database, since Mr. Watkins assumed office in 1984, 11 peo­ple were sen­tenced to death, three of them were exe­cut­ed, and one was grant­ed relief. As stat­ed on the Trumbull County Prosecutor’s web­site: Mr. Watkins has suc­cess­ful­ly pros­e­cut­ed 46 mur­der tri­als, and has per­son­al­ly obtained con­vic­tions which result­ed in nine (9) of the twelve (12) Trumbull County mur­der­ers who have been sen­tenced to death under the Ohio law.” As the charts below illus­trate, although Trumbull County ranks eighth in death penal­ty sen­tences among Ohio coun­ties, when adjust­ed by pop­u­la­tion size, it ranks as the fourth high­est, a dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly high rate of death sen­tenc­ing rel­a­tive to its pop­u­la­tion. This data may sug­gest a notable incli­na­tion towards the use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment dur­ing Mr. Watkins’s tenure. 

Figure 2. List of the top 10 Ohio coun­ties with Death Sentences since 1973
Figure 3. The same coun­ties sort­ed based on death sen­tence occur­rences per capita
Citation Guide
Sources

Photo by Oz Seyrek on Unsplash.

Daniel Nichanian, In Ohio, Uncontested Elections Worsen a Breakdown in Accountability for Prosecutor, BOLTS, January 19th, 2024; DeAngelo G, McCannon BC., Political com­pe­ti­tion in judge and pros­e­cu­tor elec­tions,” European Journal of Law and Economics, 2019 Oct 15;48:167 – 93; Hessick CB, Morse M., Picking Prosecutors,” Iowa L. Rev.. 2019;105:1537; Wright RF, Yates J, Hessick CB., Election Contestation and Progressive Prosecutors,” Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law, Forthcoming; Bermeo, N., On Democratic Backsliding,” Journal of Democracy, 27(1), 5 – 19, 2016; Levitsky S, Ziblatt D. How Democracies Die. Crown; 2019 or Przeworski ACrises of Democracy. Cambridge University Press; 2019.

See how ero­sion of democ­ra­cy has been mea­sured, e.g., thanks to the Varieties of Democracy project: https://v‑dem.net ; Freedom House: https://​free​dom​house​.org; or the Economist Intelligence Unit: https://​www​.eiu​.com/​n​/​c​a​m​p​a​i​g​n​s​/​d​e​m​o​c​r​a​c​y​-​i​n​d​e​x​-​2022/ .