Studies
Items: 91 — 100
Aug 18, 2015
STUDIES: Racial Bias in Jury Selection
A new study of trials in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, revealed that potential jurors who were black were much more likely to be struck from juries than non-blacks. The results were consistent with findings from Alabama, North Carolina, and other parts of Louisiana, highlighting an issue that will be reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court this…
Read MoreAug 05, 2015
NEW RESOURCES: Capital Punishment and the State of Criminal Justice 2015
The American Bar Association has released a new publication, The State of Criminal Justice 2015, examining major issues, trends, and significant changes in America’s criminal justice system. The chapter devoted to capital punishment was written by Ronald Tabak, an attorney at Skadden Arps and board member of the Death Penalty Information Center. Tabak presents evidence of the declining use of the death penalty in death sentences and executions,…
Read MoreAug 04, 2015
New Study Shows Discrimination in Colorado Prosecutors’ Use of Death Penalty
A new study to be published in the University of Denver Law Review shows that whether prosecutors seek the death penalty in Colorado “depends to an alarming extent on the race and geographic location of the defendant.” The study — based upon 10 years of data collected by attorney Meg Beardsley and University of Denver law professors Sam Kamin and Justin Marceau and sociology professor Scott Phillips — shows…
Read MoreJul 16, 2015
STUDIES: “Untrustworthy” Faces Increase Likelihood of Death Sentence
Two new studies suggest that a defendant’s facial appearance predicts whether he is sentenced to life or to death, regardless of actual guilt or innocence. A study of Florida inmates published in the July 15 edition of Psychological Science finds that the perceived degree of trustworthiness of a defendant’s face predicted which of the two sentences a defendant who has been convicted of murder ultimately received. A follow-up study also showed that the link between perceived…
Read MoreJul 10, 2015
Childhood Trauma Prevalent Among Death Row Inmates
A majority of Texas death row prisoners who voluntarily responded to a recent survey by the Texas Observer reported having experienced abuse or other trauma as children. The survey results are consistent with the findings of academic studies that have repeatedly documented high rates of childhood abuse among those sentenced to death. The Texas Observer survey found that 22 of the 41 death row prisoners who responded (54%)…
Read MoreJun 22, 2015
STUDY: “The Hidden Costs of Wrongful Capital Prosecutions in North Carolina”
A new study by North Carolina’s Center for Death Penalty Litigation examines the financial and human costs of cases in which, “prosecutors sought the death penalty despite a clear lack of evidence, resulting in acquittal or dismissal of…
Read MoreJun 17, 2015
“Death Row, USA Spring 2015” Illustrates Continuing Decline of Death Penalty
The Spring 2015 update to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s publication, Death Row, USA, reports that 3,002 men and women were on death rows across the United States as of April 1, 2015. This reflects a continuing decline in the size of death row, down 13% since Spring 2005, when 3,452 people were on America’s death rows. Several states saw significant drops in their death row populations over that period while carrying out few or no executions:…
Read MoreApr 13, 2015
“Death Row USA, Winter 2015” Shows More Than 12% Drop in U.S. Death Row in Last Decade
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Death Row USA, which reports state-by-state information on death rows across the country, reflects a more than 12% decline in the size of death row nationwide. The Winter 2015 edition reports that 3,019 inmates were on America’s death rows as of December 31, 2014, down 12.6% from the 3,455 men and women reported ten years earlier. The racial demographics of death row are now 43% white, 42% black,…
Read MoreApr 09, 2015
Ohio Reports Highlight Decline in Death Sentences, Emphasize Recent Exonerations
Two recent reports from Ohio highlighted the decline in the use of capital punishment in that state. On March 30, the Ohio Attorney General’s Office released its annual report on capital punishment. The Attorney General’s report noted three new death sentences, one commutation, and one execution in Ohio in 2014, down from the state’s peak of 17 death sentences in both 1995 and 1996. It also reported that Ohio juries have imposed four or fewer death sentences in each of the…
Read MoreApr 01, 2015
Amnesty International Reports Worldwide Decline in Executions
Executions around the world declined by 22% last year, according to Amnesty International’s 2014 annual report on death sentences and executions. The report — released on April 1 — indicates that an estimated 607 people were executed worldwide in 2014, compared to 778 in 2013. The global totals do not include executions in China, where data on the death penalty is considered a state secret. On a regional level, Amnesty reported notable declines in Sub-Saharan Africa, where…
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