In the October 2022 episode of Discussions with DPIC, Death Penalty Information Center Deputy Director Ngozi Ndulue and Data Storyteller Tiana Herring dis­cuss DPIC’s 2022 report Deeply Rooted: How Racial History Informs Oklahoma’s Death Penalty. The report looks at the racial his­to­ry, present, and future of Oklahoma’s death penal­ty. Ndulue and Herring explore Oklahoma’s unique his­to­ry, the key find­ings of the report, its rela­tion­ship to DPIC’s ear­li­er work, and lessons from Oklahoma’s expe­ri­ence that are applicable nationwide.

Herring, the lead author of Deeply Rooted, explains how it was inspired by DPIC’s 2020 report Enduring Injustice: The Persistence of Racial Discrimination in the U.S. Death Penalty, authored by Ndulue. The report exam­ines how Oklahoma’s death penal­ty sys­tem is, in many ways, a prod­uct of its long and trou­bled his­to­ry with com­mu­ni­ties of col­or.” Herring notes that the effect the race of vic­tim has on death sen­tenc­ing is one exam­ple of the per­sis­tence of racial dis­crim­i­na­tion in Oklahoma: We found in our report that, in cas­es with vic­tims of a sin­gle race, there were 19 Black defen­dants who had been exe­cut­ed for the mur­der of white vic­tims, while only two white defen­dants had been exe­cut­ed for the mur­der of Black vic­tims.… [T]his trend sug­gests a pref­er­en­tial valu­ing of white vic­tims that’s real­ly rem­i­nis­cent of what we see when review­ing cas­es from the hey­days of lynchings.”

The deci­sion to high­light Oklahoma was inten­tion­al giv­en recent devel­op­ments in the state. In July 2022, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals sched­uled 25 exe­cu­tions between August 2022 and December 2024. Oklahoma has also been the sub­ject of mul­ti­ple inves­ti­ga­tions, all of which point to sys­temic prob­lems with the state’s use of the death penal­ty. Ndulue explains that it seems like Oklahoma is at a cross­roads. It can con­tin­ue to be the nation­al out­lier that it has been … or it can take a more delib­er­a­tive look. So, we thought that it was impor­tant to actu­al­ly shine that spot­light on Oklahoma.” 

Many issues with Oklahoma’s death penal­ty sys­tem mir­ror nation­al prob­lems, includ­ing racial dis­par­i­ties in death sen­tenc­ing and geo­graph­ic arbi­trari­ness. Oklahoma County and Tulsa County are death penal­ty out­liers in the state; no coun­ty out­side of Texas has exe­cut­ed more peo­ple than these juris­dic­tions. The pro­lif­ic use of the death penal­ty in these coun­ties has result­ed in half of death sen­tences in these coun­ties being reversed or result­ing in com­mu­ta­tion or exon­er­a­tion. Recognizing Oklahoma and Tulsa coun­ties’ roles in death penal­ty trends in the state is one of Herring’s key take­aways from the report. 

The report also explores Oklahoma’s par­tic­u­lar his­to­ry with Native Americans and the death penal­ty. After the Trail of Tears brought a large Native American pop­u­la­tion to Oklahoma, most of the state’s 19th Century exe­cu­tions were of Native Americans. Even today, Native Americans are unique­ly affect­ed by the death penal­ty in Oklahoma. Oklahoma has imposed the most death sen­tences on Native American defen­dants in the states, and is also respon­si­ble for a third of all exe­cu­tions of Native Americans since 1976,” Herring explains.

Ndulue sug­gests the myr­i­ad of prob­lems with Oklahoma’s death penal­ty chal­lenge the reli­a­bil­i­ty of the death penal­ty: issues around the num­ber of exon­er­a­tions that have hap­pened, the dis­par­i­ties in the race of those exon­er­at­ed and the rea­sons for exon­er­a­tion, and just the gen­er­al ques­tions about how many cas­es have unread mud­died pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct, real­ly put into ques­tion the reli­a­bil­i­ty of the death penal­ty and its admin­is­tra­tion in these coun­ties and in Oklahoma in gen­er­al.” Ndulue says oth­er states eval­u­at­ing their death penal­ty sys­tem can learn from Oklahoma by assess­ing what the ties are to racial bias in the legal sys­tem, what poten­tial reme­dies are, and whether the use of the death penal­ty in out­lier coun­ties is rais­ing con­cerns about the over­all use of the death penal­ty in that state.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Discussions with DPIC pod­cast, DPIC’s New Report on the Racial History of Oklahoma’s Death Penalty, Death Penalty Information Center, October 31, 2022; Deeply Rooted: How Racial History Informs Oklahoma’s Death Penalty, Death Penalty Information Center, October 2022.