Military

Racial Disparity in the Military Death Penalty

Race dis­crim­i­na­tion has long been an issue in the admin­is­tra­tion of the mil­i­tary’s death penal­ty. With two African-American pris­on­ers, one white pris­on­er, and one pris­on­er of Middle Eastern descent on the mil­i­tary death row as of September 2019, the cur­rent race dis­par­i­ty appears less pro­nounced than in the past. However, an analy­sis of mil­i­tary death-penal­ty charg­ing and sen­tenc­ing prac­tices has shown that dis­crim­i­na­tion is deeply root­ed in the mil­i­tary death-penalty system.

A two-decade study of U.S. mil­i­tary cap­i­tal cas­es from 1984 – 2005 found found com­pelling evi­dence that the race of the accused and of the vic­tim has influ­enced charg­ing and sen­tenc­ing deci­sions in the pro­cess­ing of death-eli­gi­ble mur­der cas­es in the [mil­i­tary jus­tice] sys­tem.” The study found evi­dence of what it called a sub­stan­tial risk” of three dis­tinct forms of racial prej­u­dice in mil­i­tary death-penal­ty cas­es. First, it found evi­dence of dis­crim­i­na­tion based on the race of the vic­tim, with cap­i­tal out­comes more like­ly when there was a white vic­tim. Second, it found that the death penal­ty was more like­ly to be pur­sued and death sen­tences imposed when a minor­i­ty defen­dant was accused of killing a white vic­tim. Third, it found inde­pen­dent race of defen­dant effects, with minor­i­ty-accused defen­dants more like­ly to face the death penalty. 

The study found race dis­crim­i­na­tion oper­at­ing in dif­fer­ent ways in dif­fer­ent stages of cap­i­tal pro­ceed­ings. The race of vic­tim effects were most pro­nounced in the selec­tion of cas­es to be cap­i­tal­ly pros­e­cut­ed and in the degree of guilt deci­sions of mil­i­tary court-mar­tial mem­bers that advance cas­es to a cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing hear­ing. On the oth­er hand, defen­dant-based racial bias was man­i­fest­ed in the life-or-death deci­sions of mil­i­tary court-mar­tial mem­bers in cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing hear­ings. The study found that in white-vic­tim cas­es, which con­sti­tute 97% of [mil­i­tary] cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing hear­ing cas­es, minor­i­ty accused face a sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er risk of a death sen­tence than do sim­i­lar­ly sit­u­at­ed white accused.”

According to mil­i­tary defense lawyer Dwight Sullivan, While the num­ber of ser­vice­mem­bers under death sen­tence is fair­ly small, the racial dis­par­i­ty in mil­i­tary death penal­ty cas­es has been dis­tress­ing­ly per­sis­tent. During World War II, African-Americans account­ed for less than 10 per­cent of the Army. Yet, of the 70 sol­diers exe­cut­ed in Europe dur­ing the war, 55 [79%] were African-American. After President Truman ordered an end to the armed forces’ seg­re­ga­tion in 1948, this racial dis­par­i­ty actu­al­ly increased. The mil­i­tary car­ried out 12 exe­cu­tions from 1954 until the most recent one in 1961. Eleven of the 12 exe­cut­ed ser­vice­mem­bers were African-American.”

The death sen­tences adjudged since 1961 have con­tin­ued to fall dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly on minor­i­ty ser­vice­mem­bers. In 1983, when the Court of Military Appeals issued its Matthews opin­ion inval­i­dat­ing the mil­i­tary death penal­ty, sev­en ser­vice­mem­bers were on death row. Five were African-American, one was Latino, and one was Caucasian.“

In addi­tion to the racial dis­par­i­ty among death row inmates, there is also racial dis­par­i­ty among vic­tims. Each time an African American has been sent to the mil­i­tary’s death row, the case has involved a white vic­tim. (R. Serrano, A Grim Life on Military Death Row,” Los Angeles Times, 7/​12/​94). For more infor­ma­tion about racial dis­par­i­ties, see DPIC’s Race page.

For the most com­pre­hen­sive review of race and the mil­i­tary death penal­ty, see David C. Baldus, Catherine M. Grosso, George Woodworth, and Richard Newell, Racial Discrimination in the Administration of the Death Penalty: The Experience of the United States Armed Forces (1984 – 2005), The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, vol. 101, issue 4, at 1227 – 1335 (2012).