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…
Read MoreNews
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…
Read MoreNews
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…
Read MoreNews
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…
Read MoreNews
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…
Read More

