Juan Cartagena (pic­tured), President and General Counsel of LatinoJustice PRLDEF (for­mer­ly the Puerto Rican Legal Defense Fund), says there is a grow­ing under­stand­ing” among Latinos in Florida and across the coun­try that the death penal­ty is bro­ken and it can’t be fixed.” In an op-ed for the Orlando Sentinel, Cartagena explains the rea­sons for Latino oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty, espe­cial­ly in Florida, which has a large Latino pop­u­la­tion and is home to Miami-Dade, Hillsborough, Pinellas, and Duval coun­ties. Those four coun­ties are among the 16 coun­ties that have imposed the most death sen­tences in the U.S. over the past five years and, Cartagena writes, “[t]hey all suf­fer from pros­e­cu­tor mis­con­duct, bad defense lawyers, wrong­ful con­vic­tions and racial bias. In Miami-Dade County from 2010 to 2015, every sin­gle per­son sen­tenced to death was black or Latino.” Cartagena par­tic­u­lar­ly empha­sizes the his­tor­i­cal oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty among Puerto Ricans, of whom increas­ing num­bers have moved to Florida in recent years. Puerto Rico abol­ished the death penal­ty in 1929. Its con­sti­tu­tion, draft­ed in 1952, states that the death penal­ty shall not exist.’ Opposition to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is a part of our lega­cy.” As a result, he writes, Puerto Ricans in Florida are pay­ing close atten­tion” to the seri­ous flaws in Florida’s death penal­ty, includ­ing allow­ing non-unan­i­mous juries to impose death sen­tences – a prac­tice that was struck down as uncon­sti­tu­tion­al ear­li­er this year. All these con­cerns, he says, are reflect­ed in a nation­wide shift away from the death penal­ty” among Latinos. In the last two years, three major Latino orga­ni­za­tions have made strong pub­lic state­ments against the death penal­ty. The National Latino Evangelical Coalition adopt­ed a posi­tion against the death penal­ty in March 2015, con­tribut­ing to a change in the National Association of Evangelicals’ stance lat­er that year. In June 2016, the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda called for repeal of the death penal­ty, and in August, the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators passed a res­o­lu­tion urging repeal.

According to the July 1, 2016 edi­tion of Death Row USA, a quar­ter­ly pub­li­ca­tion of the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, 380 Latino/​Latina pris­on­ers are on death row in the United States, com­pris­ing 13% of the nation’s death row. Nearly 90% are on one of five state death rows: California (185), Texas (71), Florida (31), Arizona (28), or Pennsylvania (16). 91 of them – approx­i­mate­ly one quar­ter – were for­eign nation­als from Latin American countries. 

(J. Cartagena, Latinos join call to end death Florida’s penal­ty,” Orlando Sentinel, December 10, 2016.) See New Voices and Race.

Citation Guide