American Judicature Journal

Judicature Journal Examines Impact of Death Penalty on Justice System 

The March-April 2006 edi­tion of Judicature, the jour­nal of the American Judicature Society, includes a series of arti­cles about the effects of the death penal­ty on the admin­is­tra­tion of jus­tice. The fol­low­ing quo­ta­tions are from these articles:

The Shadow of Death: The Effect of Capital Punishment on American Criminal Law and Policy by Carol Steiker and Jordan Steiker, law pro­fes­sors at Harvard and University of Texas, respectively

[T]he pres­ence and promi­nence of the death penal­ty tends to obscure the extra­or­di­nary rise in the American prison pop­u­la­tion (both in absolute and per­cent­age terms). The death penal­ty, as the most severe pun­ish­ment and the clear­est sym­bol of state author­i­ty, is the obvi­ous tar­get of reformist efforts. Though the United States has become an out­lier both in its reten­tion of the death penal­ty and in its rates of incar­cer­a­tion, the fas­ci­na­tion with death crowds out con­cern about puni­tive­ness on the non-capital side.” 

Tinkering with the machin­ery of death: Capital Punishment’s Toll on The American Judiciary

by Michael Hintze, Senior Attorney at Microsoft

Based on the expe­ri­ence of 30 years since the Furman deci­sion, it appears to be inevitable that the exis­tence of the death penal­ty under­mines the con­fi­dence in and toward the judiciary. 


At some point, our leg­isla­tive bod­ies and the judi­cia­ry itself (fol­low­ing the lead of Justice Blackmun and oth­ers), must ask whether main­tain­ing the death penal­ty is worth it.”

Capital Punishment and the Administration of Justice: A Trial prosecutor’s perspective

by Bill Hawkins, Asst. District Attorney, Harris County, TX

In a large juris­dic­tion like Harris County, the pros­e­cu­tion of a cap­i­tal death case does not sig­nif­i­cant­ly affect the ordi­nary oper­a­tions of the office.


In Texas, non-death cap­i­tal jury selec­tion is com­plet­ed in a day. Death penal­ty jury selec­tion, by com­par­i­son, lasts close to three weeks aver­age in Harris County where death cas­es are hand­ed down more often. In oth­er juris­dic­tions where seek­ing death is a rare instance, jury selec­tion may last much longer due to the inex­pe­ri­ence of the parties involved.” 

Defending Death Penalty Judgments by Dane R. Gillette,

Senior Asst. Attorney General, California

Even apart from the lit­i­ga­tion sur­round­ing exe­cu­tion dates, defend­ing death penal­ty judg­ments is among the most dif­fi­cult and time-con­sum­ing work of the office. Pervading every aspect of a cap­i­tal case, from the deci­sion by the dis­trict attor­ney to seek death, through tri­al, appeal, and col­lat­er­al chal­lenges, is solemn appre­ci­a­tion of the con­se­quences when the state pre­vails: the con­demned inmate will be executed.”

How the Malfunctioning Death Penalty Challenges the Criminal Justice System

by R. Neal Walker, Director of the Louisiana Capital Assistance Center in New Orleans

One would hope that the sheer num­ber of exon­er­a­tions would con­vince the bench and leg­is­la­tures in death penal­ty juris­dic­tions that, even with jurispru­den­tial promis­es of super due process for cap­i­tal defen­dants, the sta­tus quo can­not insure that inno­cent or unde­serv­ing defen­dants are not sen­tenced to death.”

When Jurors Choose to See, They Choose Life

by Deborah A. Goins, Asst. Public Defender in Polk County, Florida

[M]any peo­ple who pro­fess to be pro-death penal­ty at the time of jury selec­tion ques­tion­ing seem to under­go a meta­mor­pho­sis when faced with the very real task of decid­ing the fate of an iden­ti­fi­able per­son who is present in the court­room. Researching the hearts and minds of these jurors is the very essence of cap­i­tal defense litigation.”

Living with the Death Penalty

by Henry Leyte-Vidal and Scott J. Silverman, Judges, Circuit Court of Miami

The prospec­tive jurors quick­ly under­stand that, if select­ed, their deci­sions will have real con­se­quences. They are told that if they find the defen­dant guilty of first-degree mur­der, you will then ask them to rec­om­mend whether the court should sen­tence the defen­dant to life or death.’ No longer do the per­spec­tive jurors see the death penal­ty as the mere sub­ject of the­o­ret­i­cal or hypo­thet­i­cal ban­ter with old friends. If cho­sen, each juror will have to delib­er­ate with oth­er mem­bers of their com­mu­ni­ty and decide on a rec­om­men­da­tion that they will have to live with for the rest of their lives. There is no hard­er deci­sion for a fel­low cit­i­zen in American jurisprudence.” 

The Impacts of Capital Cases on a Federal Trial Court

by Benjamin A. Goldberger, asso­ciate, McDermott Will & Emery LLP

Capital cas­es are time con­sum­ing, emo­tion­al­ly drain­ing affairs that often involve lengthy jury tri­als. This alone chal­lenges the court’s abil­i­ty to man­age the hun­dreds of oth­er cas­es pend­ing before any one dis­trict court judge. The strain and delay on the admin­is­tra­tion of jus­tice in oth­er cas­es is par­tic­u­lar­ly acute if a cap­i­tal case is brought in a divi­sion that has but one or two judges.”

Effects of Capital Punishment on the Justice System: Reflections of a State Supreme Court Justice

by Brent E. Dickson, Associate Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court

The Indiana leg­is­la­ture rein­sti­tut­ed the death penal­ty in 1977. … During the ensu­ing 27 years, Indiana tri­al courts ordered the death penal­ty for 90 defen­dants. These cas­es pro­duced 148 Indiana Supreme Court major­i­ty opin­ions, 45 rever­sals of the sen­tence with the defen­dant no longer eli­gi­ble for the death penal­ty, but now serv­ing a sen­tence oth­er than death (life impris­on­ment with­out parole or for a spe­cif­ic term of years), and 16 exe­cu­tions. In the course of the 16 cas­es result­ing in an exe­cu­tion, there were 33 state tri­al court pro­ceed­ings (includ­ing tri­al, re-tri­al, and post-con­vic­tion hear­ings), 44 state supreme court major­i­ty opin­ions and sub­stan­tive orders, and 25 fed­er­al court opinions.” 

Jurors’ Emotional Reactions to Serving on a Capital Trial

by Michael E. Antonio, Ph. D., for­mer­ly with the Capital Jury Project, Northeastern Univ.

Overall these find­ings indi­cate that cap­i­tal jurors expe­ri­ence sig­nif­i­cant stress when faced with the task of impos­ing the ulti­mate pun­ish­ment of death, where­as jurors in non-cap­i­tal tri­als are spared such phys­i­cal and emotional stress.”

Balancing the Scales of Justice 

by Dan S. Levey, Advisor for Victims to Arizona Governor 

The actu­al costs of the death penal­ty, in terms of emo­tion­al strain on fam­i­lies, cas­es not heard in court because cap­i­tal tri­als are crowd­ing out oth­er crimes, and the diver­sion of resources from police and vic­tim ser­vices, are far high­er than the sim­ple tra­di­tion­al debate generally considers.

Death penal­ty tri­als often have more lawyers, experts, wit­ness­es, and poten­tial jurors than oth­er tri­als. And, unlike oth­er sen­tences, death sen­tences are auto­mat­i­cal­ly appealed. Lengthy and expen­sive tri­als divert scarce resources from oth­er cas­es that may be equal­ly dam­ag­ing to peo­ple. There is a lim­it­ed amount of mon­ey allo­cat­ed to the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. A death penal­ty case can take need­ed funds from oth­er crit­i­cal areas such as law enforce­ment and victim services.” 

The Impact of Capital Punishment on Families of Defendants and Murder Victims’ Family Members

by Rachel King, Author and Legal Writing instruc­tor at Howard Law School

There are many ways in which the death penal­ty harms fam­i­lies. For the mur­der vic­tims’ fam­i­ly mem­bers, the death penal­ty estab­lish­es a hier­ar­chy of vic­tims where some lives are val­ued more than oth­ers. It turns fam­i­ly mem­bers against each oth­er. It cre­ates a class of good’ vic­tims and bad’ vic­tims. The fam­i­lies of the con­demned are trau­ma­tized by the process and feel ostra­cized and alien­at­ed as they watch their gov­ern­ment sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly pre­pare to kill their loved ones. They feel as if their entire com­mu­ni­ty has turned against them.”

A Poster Child for Us

by Robert Blecker, Professor at New York Law School

A very strong pre­sump­tion of life should attach to juve­nile killers. We should almost nev­er exe­cute a per­son for what he or she did at 16 or 17.
But almost nev­er is not nev­er.
Constitutionally, jurispru­den­tial­ly and moral­ly, cap­i­tal crimes should be defined nar­row­ly, to include only the worst of the worst. Current death penal­ty statutes com­mon­ly vio­late this ideal.” 

The Right Decision on the Juvenile Death Penalty

by Craig M. Bradley, Professor, Indiana University Law School

[T]he American Psychiatric Association … for­bids diag­nos­ing any patient under 18 as a psy­chopath or a sociopath because psy­chi­a­trists can’t dis­tin­guish between juve­niles whose crime reflects unfor­tu­nate yet tran­sient imma­tu­ri­ty and the rare juve­nile offend­er whose crime reflects irrepara­ble cor­rup­tion.’ If psy­chi­a­trists can’t make that dis­tinc­tion, then it is too much to ask jurors to do it.”

If Capital Punishment Were Subject to Consumer Protection Laws

by David McCord, Professor, Drake University Law School

In short, in pur­chas­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, the pub­lic has been defraud­ed into buy­ing a lemon.’ The ram­i­fi­ca­tions of this flawed trans­ac­tion are appar­ent. The por­tion of the pub­lic that desires cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment (around 70 per­cent by most Gallup Polls) is con­tin­u­al­ly dis­ap­point­ed in the actu­al oper­a­tion of the sys­tem. This dis­ap­point­ment cor­rodes the pub­lic’s sense of con­fi­dence in the effi­ca­cy of the admin­is­tra­tion of jus­tice not only as to the worst mur­ders, but as to the sys­tem as a whole.”

(Judicature, March-April 2006, Vol. 89 No. 5).