On Tuesday, the Death Penalty Information Center released a new report that con­nects Ohio’s racial his­to­ry to the mod­ern use of the death penal­ty in the state. Broken Promises: How a History of Racial Violence and Bias Shaped Ohio’s Death Penalty doc­u­ments how racial dis­crim­i­na­tion is the through­line that runs from the state’s found­ing to its appli­ca­tion of cap­i­tal punishment today. 

The report notes that Ohio’s Black Laws, adopt­ed in the ear­ly 1800s, made race a crit­i­cal ele­ment of the state’s legal sys­tem. Ohio’s 1807 Negro Evidence Law,” for exam­ple, pro­hib­it­ed Black peo­ple from tes­ti­fy­ing against white peo­ple in court. This cre­at­ed a dou­ble legal stan­dard; white Ohioans were per­mit­ted to vic­tim­ize Black peo­ple with no legal con­se­quences so long as there were no white wit­ness­es will­ing to tes­ti­fy on the Black vic­tims’ behalf. Ohio’s oth­er Black laws insti­tut­ed racial restric­tions on jury ser­vice. Modern stud­ies find that jury discrimination persists. 

DPIC’s review of mod­ern death sen­tenc­ing sta­tis­tics reveal a con­tin­ued empha­sis on race in Ohio’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment sys­tem. An analy­sis of race of vic­tim data for all 465 mod­ern death sen­tences in Ohio found that 75% of death sen­tences were for cas­es with at least one white vic­tim. For con­text, 66% of mur­der vic­tims in the state are Black. The dis­par­i­ties become more pro­nounced when fac­tor­ing in a victim’s gen­der. While 44% of Ohio’s mur­der vic­tims are Black men, just 13% of death sen­tences involved at least one Black male vic­tim. A sep­a­rate study found that homi­cides involv­ing white female vic­tims are six times more like­ly to result in an exe­cu­tion than homi­cides involv­ing Black male victims. 

The report also fea­tures mul­ti­ple sto­ries of Black cap­i­tal defen­dants who faced overt racial dis­crim­i­na­tion dur­ing their tri­als. For exam­ple, Malik Allah-U-Akbar’s attor­ney hired a defense expert who diag­nosed Mr. Akbar with anti­so­cial per­son­al­i­ty dis­or­der. The expert false­ly tes­ti­fied at tri­al that urban” Black males are sub­stan­tial­ly more prone to anti­so­cial per­son­al­i­ty dis­or­der and that the best treat­ment for antisocial…is to throw them away, lock them up.” Mr. Akbar’s attor­ney lat­er reit­er­at­ed this false nar­ra­tive, stat­ing “[t]his isn’t a sit­u­a­tion you can treat. … You have to put him out of soci­ety until it runs its course.” 

Two cen­turies ago, race was a crit­i­cal fac­tor affect­ing whether pros­e­cu­tors sought the death penal­ty and whether some­one was exe­cut­ed in our state, and race still influ­ences many death penal­ty deci­sions today,” said Tiana Herring, DPIC’s Data Storyteller and the lead author of the report. This can’t be squared with the rea­son­able expec­ta­tion that Ohioans have to be treat­ed equal­ly by our legal system.” 

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