For decades, stud­ies have shown per­sis­tent racial dis­par­i­ties in the admin­is­tra­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Saying death sen­tences are uneven­ly and unfair­ly applied based on race,” California Governor Gavin Newsom on March 13, 2019 imposed a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions in the state with the nation’s largest death row. Responding to the governor’s mora­to­ri­um In an op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, Stanford psy­chol­o­gy pro­fes­sor Jennifer Eberhardt—one of the lead­ing researchers on social sci­ence and race — says race dis­crim­i­na­tion in the death penal­ty is real” and that the research sup­ports the governor’s claim. In a state that is only 6% black, more than one-third of defen­dants sen­tenced to death in California are black,” Eberhardt said. California, like oth­er death-penal­ty states, also shows evi­dence of bias in favor of white vic­tims. Defendants who kill white vic­tims are much more like­ly to be sen­tenced to death than those who kill black victims.

But the truth is more com­pli­cat­ed, and more insid­i­ous, than a sim­ple black/​white divide,” Eberhardt explains. Her ground­break­ing 2006 study of two decades of death sen­tences in Philadelphia found bias oper­at­ing at the sub­con­scious lev­el based upon an African American’s phys­i­cal appear­ance. When black men are judged by juries in cap­i­tal cas­es, their sen­tences can hinge on just how black they are per­ceived to be,” Eberhardt writes. Those with dark­er skin, wider noses and thick­er lips are sub­ject to far harsh­er sen­tenc­ing than lighter-skinned blacks with less promi­nent, so-called black fea­tures.” In the study peri­od between 1979 and 1999, black defen­dants with stereo­typ­i­cal­ly African fea­tures were much more like­ly to be sen­tenced to death than black defen­dants with less stereo­typ­i­cal fea­tures (see image), but only if the vic­tim was white. In the study of Philadelphia cap­i­tal con­vic­tions, Of the men rat­ed low in stereo­typ­i­cal fea­tures, only 24% had been sen­tenced to death. But more than 57% of the high­ly stereo­typ­i­cal” black defen­dants were sen­tenced to die for their crimes.” Those strong dis­tinc­tions sig­nal that our per­spec­tives, our crim­i­nal jus­tice process and our insti­tu­tions are influ­enced by prim­i­tive racial nar­ra­tives that link peo­ple of African descent to dark­ness and evil,” she says.

Eberhardt’s op-ed describes how racial bias has become ingrained in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. Research has shown that high­light­ing racial dif­fer­ences in the jus­tice sys­tem actu­al­ly leads mem­bers of the broad­er pub­lic to be more sup­port­ive of puni­tive poli­cies, includ­ing the death penal­ty. When the implic­it nar­ra­tive of black wicked­ness’ is not chal­lenged, it can seem to per­fect­ly explain the dis­par­i­ties in out­comes,” she says. In addi­tion, unlike any oth­er equal pro­tec­tion chal­lenge under the U.S. Constitution, the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1987 deci­sion in McCleskey v. Kemp barred defen­dants from using sta­tis­ti­cal evi­dence as cir­cum­stan­tial evi­dence of racial bias, instead requir­ing proof of par­tic­u­lar­ized dis­crim­i­na­tion” — that is, direct evi­dence of inten­tion­al dis­crim­i­na­tion in their case. The rul­ing came under heavy crit­i­cism from legal schol­ars and civ­il rights activists, con­cerned that it made insti­tu­tion­al racial bias con­sti­tu­tion­al, and sim­ply part of the sta­tus quo,” Eberhardt writes, and was the one rul­ing Justice Lewis Powell, the author of the 5 – 4 deci­sion, said he regret­ted in his time on the Court.

(Jennifer Eberhardt, Bias in the jus­tice sys­tem is real, and the death penal­ty reveals it, Los Angeles Times, March 21, 2019; Gavin Newsom, California gov­er­nor: Why I put a freeze on the death penal­ty, CNN, March 21, 2019.) See Race and Studies.

Citation Guide