The race of victims weighs heavily in capital punishment decisions.

Studies con­firm that defen­dants with white vic­tims are more like­ly to be charged cap­i­tal­ly, sen­tenced to death, have those sen­tences upheld on appeal, and be exe­cut­ed. The search­able data­base found on this page brings togeth­er race of the defen­dant, the defendant’s age at the time of the crime, date of death sen­tence, race of the vic­tim, and juris­dic­tion to offer a clear view of the racial and sys­temic imbal­ances that per­sist with­in death-penalty outcomes. 

Gratitude to Professor Frank Baumgartner of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his team for their exten­sive research and rig­or­ous data val­i­da­tion in com­pil­ing race-relat­ed victim data.

Instructions and Usage Notes

Click any col­umn head­er to sort the table by that col­umn. The first click will arrange the data in ascend­ing order (for exam­ple, A – Z for text or small­est to largest for num­bers). Click the same head­er again to reverse the order (Z – A or largest to small­est). For def­i­n­i­tions and code keys, please con­sult the code­book.

To down­load the data­base as a spread­sheet (csv for­mat), click here