Policy

Clemency

Clemency is the process by which a governor, president, or administrative board may reduce a defendant’s sentence or grant a pardon. Clemencies have been granted in death-penalty cases for a variety of reasons.

Overview

All states and the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment have a process for low­er­ing the sen­tence or par­don­ing those fac­ing crim­i­nal charges. Clemency is an espe­cial­ly impor­tant con­sid­er­a­tion for those on death row. Even after all legal appeals in the courts have been exhaust­ed, there is still a pos­si­bil­i­ty that a pris­on­er’s life will be spared.

Clemencies in indi­vid­ual cap­i­tal cas­es are rare, but there have been a num­ber of blan­ket grants of clemen­cy by gov­er­nors and one by President Joseph Biden which express con­cern about sys­temic prob­lems and the over­all fair­ness of the death penal­ty. A 2025 study by DPI of indi­vid­ual clemen­cies exam­ined the rea­sons cit­ed when grant­i­ng clemen­cy. Mitigating fac­tors was the most often cit­ed rea­son, in near­ly a third of all cas­es, close­ly fol­lowed by con­cerns about com­par­a­tive cul­pa­bil­i­ty or exces­sive sen­tence, pos­si­ble wrong­ful con­vic­tion, and offi­cial mis­con­duct or unfair legal practices. 

At Issue

Because the pow­er of clemen­cy is vest­ed in the exec­u­tive branch of the gov­ern­ment, courts have been reluc­tant to impose stan­dards on this pro­ce­dure. Governors are elect­ed; thus the process may be high­ly polit­i­cal. For these rea­sons, clemen­cies in death penal­ty cas­es are dif­fi­cult to pre­dict and immune from judicial review.

Grants of Clemency by State

What DPI Offers

DPI keeps track of all clemen­cies grant­ed in cap­i­tal cas­es in the mod­ern era by state and year, includ­ing the rea­sons giv­en for the action. It also has com­piled mate­r­i­al on his­tor­i­cal uses of clemen­cy. Finally, DPI describes the dif­fer­ences among state laws regard­ing who makes the clemen­cy deci­sion and any con­straints on the process.

Although a reprieve is tech­ni­cal­ly a type of clemen­cy, this page dis­cuss­es only exec­u­tive acts with per­ma­nent effects on a defendant’s con­vic­tion or sen­tence. Temporary holds on exe­cu­tions are tracked on our Outcome of Death Warrants pages.

News & Developments


News

Jul 15, 2026

Murder Victim’s Daughter and Faith Leaders Urge Kansas Governor to Commute Death Sentences

In a July 8, 2026 op-ed pub­lished in the Kansas Reflector, Celeste Dixon, a retired U.S. Navy reservist and National Park Service employ­ee who lives in Pawnee County, Kansas, calls on Governor Laura Kelly to com­mute the sen­tences of the nine men on Kansas’ death row to life with­out parole. Writing from per­son­al expe­ri­ence, Ms. Dixon notes that near­ly 40 years ago, her moth­er, Marguerite, was mur­dered in Texas; almost 19 years ago, the indi­vid­ual who killed her mother was…

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News

Jul 14, 2026

Nearly 71 Years After Her Execution, Ruth Ellis, the Last Woman Executed in the UK, Receives Conditional Pardon from King Charles

On July 8, 2026, King Charles, fol­low­ing the advice of Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy, grant­ed a posthu­mous con­di­tion­al par­don to Ruth Ellis, con­vert­ing her death sen­tence to a term of life impris­on­ment. Ms. Ellis was orig­i­nal­ly sen­tenced to death for the April 10, 1955 mur­der of her roman­tic part­ner David Blakely, and she was the last woman hanged in the United Kingdom on July 13, 1955. A press release from the United Kingdom’s Ministry of Justice explains that this…

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News

Jun 18, 2026

Former Death Penalty Supporter Ohio Governor Mike DeWine Urges Abolition of the Death Penalty

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine (pic­tured), a Republican, said on June 16, 2026 that he now believes Ohio should abol­ish the death penal­ty. Gov. DeWine helped to write the state’s death penal­ty law while serv­ing as a state leg­is­la­tor in 1981, but has halt­ed exe­cu­tions dur­ing his time as gov­er­nor, cit­ing con­cerns about the state’s lethal injec­tion pro­to­col. In a state­ment, Gov. DeWine described his 50 years of reflec­tion about the death penal­ty, begin­ning with his positions…

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News

Jun 11, 2026

What to Know: Clemency and the Death Penalty

DPI’s​“What to Know” series exam­ines cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment from mul­ti­ple angles, one top­ic at a time. Each install­ment pro­vides essen­tial facts and data on spe­cif­ic aspects of the death penal­ty. This install­ment looks at clemen­cy: what it is, who holds the pow­er, and how often it changes the out­come of a cap­i­tal case. Why it mat­ters: The U.S. Supreme Court has described clemen­cy as the​“fail safe” of the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem, the last rem­e­dy for a wrongful…

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News

May 06, 2026

Reclaiming Life From the Ashes”: How Clemency Can Honor Rehabilitation on Death Row

On death row, pris­on­ers expe­ri­ence some of the harsh­est con­di­tions in the American prison sys­tem, which often take a severe psy­cho­log­i­cal and phys­i­cal toll. Despite these chal­lenges, many death-sen­­tenced pris­on­ers com­plete­ly trans­form in prison — they become remorse­ful, accept respon­si­bil­i­ty, and devote them­selves to edu­ca­tion, men­tor­ship, faith, and advo­ca­cy. Their sto­ries stand in stark con­trast to the com­mon nar­ra­tive that peo­ple sen­tenced to death…

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