In a recent study exam­in­ing death sen­tenc­ing trends around the coun­try, researchers report­ed sig­nif­i­cant dif­fer­ences between the rates at which black defen­dants who kill white vic­tims are sen­tenced to death, as com­pared to the rate at which black defen­dants who kill black vic­tims are sen­tenced to death. In every one of the sev­en states for which data was avail­able, blacks who kill whites were far more like­ly to receive a death sen­tence than blacks who killed blacks. Because the study used sen­tenc­ing rates (e.g., the num­ber of blacks sen­tenced to death out of the num­ber of blacks who com­mit­ted mur­der), the var­i­ous rates can be legit­i­mate­ly com­pared. The num­bers below indi­cate how many times greater the black defendant/​white vic­tim rate is com­pared to the black defendant/​black vic­tim rate in each state:

Georgia 22 times larg­er Indiana 8 times larg­er Maryland 22 times larg­er Nevada 4 times larg­er Pennsylvania 3 times larg­er South Carolina 23 times larg­er Virginia 18 times larg­er Arizona 9 times larg­er (in Arizona, the sen­tenc­ing rates com­pared minori­ties who killed whites to minori­ties who killed minorities). 

J. Blume, T. Eisenberg, & M. Wells, Explaining Death Row’s Population and Racial Composition,” 1 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 165, 197 (Table 8) (2004).

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