In an inter­view with The Marshall Project, Bryan Stevenson (pic­tured), direc­tor of the Equal Justice Initiative and author of Just Mercy, dis­cussed the role the his­to­ry of slav­ery, lynch­ings, and racial ter­ror­ism in the South played in the racial­ly-moti­vat­ed killings of nine black peo­ple in an his­toric black church in Charleston, South Carolina. 

In the inter­view, Stevenson described the his­tor­i­cal use of the death penal­ty as a tool to rein­force a racial­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry social order. This, he says, is man­i­fest in race-of-vic­tim dis­par­i­ties in death penal­ty cas­es: In Alabama, 65% of all mur­der vic­tims are black, but 80% of all death sen­tences are imposed [when vic­tims] are white. And that’s true through­out this coun­try. We’ve used it par­tic­u­lar­ly aggres­sive­ly when minor­i­ty defen­dants are accused of killing white people.” 

Occasionally, he says, states will seek the death penal­ty for a white man accused of a racial­ly-moti­vat­ed mur­der, mask­ing the need for an open and hon­est dis­cus­sion of this coun­try’s race prob­lems. You’ll see lots of peo­ple talk­ing enthu­si­as­ti­cal­ly about impos­ing the death penal­ty on this young man in South Carolina. But that’s a dis­trac­tion from the larg­er issue, which is that we’ve used the death penal­ty to sus­tain racial hier­ar­chy by mak­ing it pri­mar­i­ly a tool to rein­force the vic­tim­iza­tion of white people.” 

Given its his­tor­i­cal lega­cy as tool of racial oppres­sion, Stevenson urges the abo­li­tion of the death penal­ty, say­ing, If I were the gov­er­nor of South Carolina, I’d say: We’re going to abol­ish the death penal­ty, because we have a his­to­ry of lynch­ing and ter­ror that has demo­nized and bur­dened peo­ple of col­or in this state since we’ve became a state.’ … And I think every south­ern gov­er­nor should do the same. That’s when you’d get the dif­fer­ent con­ver­sa­tions start­ing in this coun­try. Then you might get some progress.”

(C. Johnson, Bryan Stevenson on Charleston and Our Real Problem with Race,” The Marshall Project, June 24, 2015.) See Race.

Citation Guide