A recent inves­ti­ga­tion of California’s death penal­ty by the Associated Press found that the geo­graph­ic loca­tion of a crime plays a sig­nif­i­cant role in whether a defen­dant receives the death penal­ty. California has the nation’s largest death row. A dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly high num­ber of inmates are from places such as Kern, Riverside, and Shasta Counties, where pros­e­cu­tors have voiced strong sup­port for the death penal­ty and jurors have been more like­ly to sup­port the sen­tence. On the oth­er hand, in coun­ties such as San Diego and San Francisco, pros­e­cu­tors have been more reluc­tant to seek a death sen­tence. I will nev­er charge the death penal­ty,” said new­ly elect­ed San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris in her inau­gu­ra­tion speech in January 2004. Harris and oth­er dis­trict attor­neys who are more cau­tious in seek­ing cap­i­tal con­vic­tions note that con­cerns about inno­cence and unfair­ness have led to their reluc­tance to seek death. Former San Diego District Attorney Paul Pfingst notes, I was very cau­tious about the use of the death penal­ty. I demand­ed a very high degree of proof of guilt and a very high degree of evi­dence that death was the appropriate sentence.” 

San Francisco, where jurors and pros­e­cu­tors tend to be lib­er­al, and Kern County, where con­ser­v­a­tives hold sway, each have rough­ly 700,000 peo­ple. But San Francisco has just 1 per­son on death row, when sta­tis­ti­cal­ly the norm is about 14. Kern County has 23 peo­ple await­ing exe­cu­tion, 10 more than the per capi­ta norm. Riverside has the high­est num­ber of inmates per capi­ta on death row, with 54. A sta­tis­ti­cal­ly pro­por­tion­ate num­ber would be slight­ly more than 30. The only coun­ty with more con­demned inmates is Los Angeles, the state’s most pop­u­lat­ed, with 193, 11 more than expect­ed under the state’s aver­age ratio. (San Mateo Daily Journal, February 6, 2004) See California.

Citation Guide