Alameda County Court House

As Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price seeks to rem­e­dy her office’s his­to­ry of dis­crim­i­na­to­ry jury selec­tion, an study pub­lished in the 2024 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies by Catherine M. Grosso, Jeffrey Fagan, and Michael Laurence finds empir­i­cal evi­dence that the race of the defen­dant and the race of the vic­tim affect the like­li­hood of a death sen­tence being imposed in California. 

The Influence of the race of defen­dant and the race of vic­tim on cap­i­tal charg­ing and sen­tenc­ing in California” exam­ined 27,000 California mur­der and manslaugh­ter cas­es between 1978 and 2002 (a time­frame that cov­ers about 75% of per­sons on California’s death row) and finds that Black and Latin[a/o] defen­dants and all defen­dants con­vict­ed of killing at least one white vic­tim are sub­stan­tial­ly more like­ly to be sen­tenced to death.” The report also finds that pros­e­cu­tors were sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to seek death against defen­dants who kill white vic­tims [and] juries were sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to sen­tence those defen­dants to death.”

The authors tie the racial dis­par­i­ties to California’s expan­sive def­i­n­i­tion of death-eli­gi­bil­i­ty. They write, The mag­ni­tude of the race of the defen­dant and race of the vic­tim effects is sub­stan­tial­ly high­er than in pri­or stud­ies in oth­er states and in sin­gle-juris­dic­tion research. The results show an entrenched pat­tern of racial dis­par­i­ties in charg­ing and sen­tenc­ing that priv­i­leges white vic­tim cas­es, as well as pat­terns of racial dis­par­i­ties in who is charged and sen­tenced to death in California courts that are the nat­ur­al result of California’s capa­cious statu­to­ry def­i­n­i­tion of death eli­gi­bil­i­ty, which per­mits vir­tu­al­ly unlim­it­ed dis­cre­tion for charg­ing and sentencing decisions.” 

The study comes at a key time as California seeks to reck­on with dis­crim­i­na­tion in its death penal­ty sys­tem. In April 2024, Alameda County’s District Attorney was ordered by a fed­er­al judge to review 35 death penal­ty con­vic­tions after the dis­clo­sure of evi­dence that sev­er­al pros­e­cu­tors inten­tion­al­ly exclud­ed Black and Jewish peo­ple from serv­ing on a cap­i­tal mur­der tri­al in 1995. DA Price has since request­ed three resen­tenc­ing hear­ings for death row pris­on­ers affect­ed by that exclu­sion. The first of those hear­ings began on July 17. The state leg­is­la­ture also recent­ly passed the California Racial Justice Act (RJA), which that the state shall not seek or obtain a crim­i­nal con­vic­tion or seek, obtain, or impose a sen­tence on the basis of race, eth­nic­i­ty, or nation­al ori­gin.” In addi­tion to ani­mus or bias show­cased dur­ing legal pro­ceed­ings, the RJA opens a path for redress if a longer or more severe sen­tence was imposed on the defen­dant when com­pared to oth­er indi­vid­u­als con­vict­ed of the same offense, and longer or more severe sen­tences were more fre­quent­ly imposed for that offense on peo­ple that share the defendant’s race.” In 2022, the RJA was expand­ed to apply to peo­ple pre­vi­ous­ly con­vict­ed of felonies, includ­ing every­one on California’s death row. The RJA specif­i­cal­ly allows for pris­on­ers to chal­lenge their sen­tences using statistical evidence.

Since March 13th, 2019, California has had a guber­na­to­r­i­al hold on exe­cu­tions (along with five oth­er states). Governor Gavin Newsom affirmed that no exe­cu­tion will occur in the state dur­ing his tenure. The last exe­cu­tion in California took place in 2006.

Citation Guide
Sources

Catherine Grosso, Jeffrey Fagan, and Michael Laurence, The influ­ence of the race of defen­dant and the race of vic­tim on cap­i­tal charg­ing and sen­tenc­ing in California, Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, 2024; Annelise Finney, Alameda County DA Seeks New Sentences for 3 People on Death Row Amid Misconduct, Record Destruction Claims, KQED, July 17, 2024.
Image cred­it: Coolcaesar, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://​cre​ativecom​mons​.org/​l​i​c​e​n​s​e​s​/​b​y​— s​a/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons