On February 5, Texas is sched­uled to exe­cute Suzanne Basso. Basso would become the 14th woman exe­cut­ed in the United States since the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed in 1976. Basso is con­fined to a wheel chair and has a his­to­ry of men­tal ill­ness. Basso was con­vict­ed of mur­der­ing a men­tal­ly dis­abled man, osten­si­bly for insur­ance mon­ey. Others con­vict­ed in the offense did not receive the death penal­ty. A recent arti­cle in the Arizona Republic not­ed an unusu­al­ly high num­ber of cap­tial pros­e­cu­tions in that state. There are 2 women on Arizona’s death row and 3 more are fac­ing cap­i­tal tri­als or re-tri­als. Elizabeth Rapaport, a law pro­fes­sor at the University of New Mexico, explained the low num­ber of women on death row nation­al­ly: The death penal­ty is most­ly about crimes against strangers. That real­ly fright­ens peo­ple,” she said. Those crimes often include rapes and rob­beries, and women just don’t do those kind of crimes.”

(M. Kiefer, 5 Arizona women face rare death penal­ty,” Arizona Republic, February 4, 2014). See Women and the Death Penalty and Arbitrariness.

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