At least 99 men and one woman are on death row in eight U.S. states, con­demned to death by judges with­out the pri­or autho­riza­tion of a jury, accord­ing to a 2019 study by researchers Michael Radelet and Ben Cohen (pic­tured) pub­lished in the Annual Review of Law and Social Science. Another 18 pris­on­ers sen­tenced to death since the resump­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the U.S. in the 1970s, the study shows, have been exe­cut­ed after judges dis­re­gard­ed or over­rode jury votes in favor of life. 

Radelet and Cohen argue that death sen­tences imposed with­out the pro­tec­tions of the right to a jury deter­mi­na­tion of sen­tence … vio­late[ ] both the orig­i­nal pur­pose of the con­sti­tu­tion­al pro­tec­tion and the evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy” that gov­ern the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of death-penal­ty prac­tices today. These sen­tences, the authors write, are the prod­uct of the con­sti­tu­tion­al blun­der of tri­al judges instead of juries decid­ing who lives and who dies.”

Radelet and Cohen’s data show that eight states have per­mit­ted or required some form of judge sen­tenc­ing in cap­i­tal cas­es since the dawn of the mod­ern era of the death penal­ty in 1972.” However, judge-sen­tenc­ing in cap­i­tal cas­es has sharply declined this cen­tu­ry, as a result of state and fed­er­al con­sti­tu­tion­al rul­ings and the actions of state legislatures. 

In 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Ring v. Arizona that the Sixth Amendment afford­ed a cap­i­tal defen­dant the right to a jury deter­mi­na­tion of all facts nec­es­sary to impose a death sen­tence. In 2016, the Court struck down Floridas death-penal­ty statute in Hurst v. Florida for vio­lat­ing that con­sti­tu­tion­al guar­an­tee. Also in 2016, the Delaware Supreme Court, in Rauf v. State, declared its judi­cial sen­tenc­ing statute uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. However, while the Delaware court ruled that Rauf applied to all cas­es in the state in which a death sen­tence had been imposed, the state and fed­er­al courts in Arizona and Florida have refused to apply Ring or Hurst to cas­es that had already com­plet­ed the direct appeal stage of judi­cial review by the time Ring was decid­ed.

Prior to Hurst, three states — Alabama, Delaware, and Florida — per­mit­ted judges to impose death sen­tences based upon non-unan­i­mous jury rec­om­men­da­tions for death and to over­ride jury rec­om­men­da­tions for life. Delaware and Florida have since dis­con­tin­ued those prac­tices and Alabama has repealed the judi­cial over­ride por­tion of its death-penal­ty statute. Indiana and Missouri direct the tri­al court to inde­pen­dent­ly deter­mine the sen­tence if the jury fails to reach a unan­i­mous sentencing verdict.

Radelet, a pro­fes­sor in the University of Colorado, Boulder’s Department of Sociology and Institute of Behavioral Science and a not­ed death-penal­ty schol­ar, and Cohen, a cap­i­tal lit­i­ga­tor with the New Orleans-based Promise of Justice Initiative, have been track­ing judi­cial sen­tenc­ing in death-penal­ty cas­es for more than a decade. In 2017, they report­ed that Florida judges had imposed at least 134 death sen­tences after juries had returned non-unan­i­mous sen­tenc­ing rec­om­men­da­tions in cas­es that were tried after Ring was decid­ed or that were still pend­ing on appeal when Ring was decid­ed. For this study, they iden­ti­fied cas­es in which states per­mit­ted judges to impose the death penal­ty with­out a jury rec­om­men­da­tion for death or per­mit­ted judges to over­ride jury rec­om­men­da­tions that a life sen­tence be imposed.

As of April 2019, they said, approx­i­mate­ly 100 cas­es remained in which defen­dants who had not waived their right to a jury had been sen­tenced to death by judges. The most (40 cas­es) were Arizona cas­es that pre­dat­ed Ring, fol­lowed by 33 cas­es of judi­cial over­ride in Alabama, and 11 death sen­tences imposed under Nebraskas judge-only sen­tenc­ing statute. They report that one woman, Robin Row, was sen­tenced to death in 1993 under Idahos pre-Ring judi­cial sen­tenc­ing pro­ce­dures. Alabama has exe­cut­ed 11 men whom judges sen­tenced to death despite jury rec­om­men­da­tions for life, fol­lowed by Florida with four jury-over­ride exe­cu­tions. Missouri has exe­cut­ed three pris­on­ers who were sen­tenced to death in judge-only sentences.

Regarding these cas­es, Radelet and Cohen write, “[b]y any mea­sure, the judge-imposed sen­tences … stem from an anachro­nis­tic ves­ti­gial process from a peri­od from which the coun­try has evolved.” The most sig­nif­i­cant ques­tion remain­ing,” they write, is of retroac­tiv­i­ty” and whether the evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy pro­hib­it the exe­cu­tion of judge-imposed death sentences.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Michael Radelet and G. Ben Cohen, The Decline of the Judicial Override, Annual Review of Law and Social Science, October 2019; Michael Radelet and G. Ben Cohen, Update to The Decline of the Judicial Override, November 122019.