Smaller Arizona Counties Lack Resources for Capital Cases

The Arizona Supreme Court recent­ly remand­ed a death penal­ty case for re-sen­tenc­ing to a coun­ty that does not have the resources to pay for it. By law, coun­ties are required to fund a spe­cial­ist to gath­er mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence for the defense to use at the sen­tenc­ing phase. Some juris­dic­tions, how­ev­er, do not have the mon­ey to pay for pre-sen­tenc­ing inves­ti­ga­tion. The sit­u­a­tion puts small­er coun­ties in the posi­tion of choos­ing to pur­sue cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing based on cost. This would make the appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty in Arizona arbi­trary because those who com­mit cap­i­tal crimes in the state’s larg­er coun­ties (Pima and Maricopa) will more like­ly be sub­ject to the death penal­ty sim­ply because of resources. If you live in Pima or Maricopa coun­ty you’re going to get one form of treat­ment, while any­where else you’re going to get a dif­fer­ent form of treat­ment,” said Sen. Elaine Richardson, who ear­li­er this year spon­sored a bill to deal with the issue by siphon­ing state finan­cial sup­port for cap­i­tal cas­es. The bill passed the Senate but failed in the House. (Arizona Capitol Times, May 292001)

Small Georgia Counties Going Broke from Death Penalty Cases

The Savannah Morning News recent­ly report­ed that small coun­ties in Georgia are going broke pros­e­cut­ing death penal­ty cas­es. If you’re spend­ing $300,000 for a (death penal­ty) case, that’s $300,000 that could be used for buy­ing road equip­ment, pay­ing salaries, the fire and sher­if­f’s depart­ments. We don’t have a lot of room to play with,” said Richard Douglas, the Long County, GA, Administrator. Douglas, who had to rely on emer­gency state grants to keep pay­checks from bounc­ing, added, If you have 2 or 3 of these in a row, that can put you in a mil­lion dol­lar hole. We’re prob­a­bly not too far removed from that.” (Savannah Morning News, January 142001)

California Would Save Tens of Millions of Dollars Annually by Abolishing the Death Penalty

Elimination of the death penal­ty would result in a net sav­ings to the state of at least sev­er­al tens of mil­lions of dol­lars annu­al­ly, and a net sav­ings to local gov­ern­ments in the mil­lions to tens of mil­lions of dol­lars on a statewide basis.” ‑Joint Legislative Budget Committee of the California Legislature, Sept. 9, 1999. (The Catalyst, February 222000)

New York Invests in Death Penalty But No Executions Occur

The New York Daily News (which has sup­port­ed the death penal­ty) esti­mat­ed that the costs asso­ci­at­ed with pur­su­ing the death penal­ty in that state could reach $238 mil­lion by the time of the first exe­cu­tion. If that exe­cu­tion is fur­ther delayed because of prob­lems with the statute, the costs could reach $408 mil­lion. Professor James Acker, a death penal­ty expert from the State University of New York in Albany, not­ed: There’s all this mon­ey being invest­ed up front with the intent of get­ting an even­tu­al exe­cu­tion. But the return on the dol­lar of these invest­ments is real­ly quite poor. So the mon­ey is thrown away. If the ulti­mate pun­ish­ment were life in prison to begin with, you would­n’t have all the added expense of a death penal­ty case .…” (New York Daily News, October 191999)

New York Death Penalty Trial 3.5 Times More Costly than Non-Capital Trial

The tax­pay­ers of Suffolk County and New York State paid $2.5 mil­lion for the cap­i­tal mur­der tri­al of Robert Shulman, who was sen­tenced to death on May 6. Because pros­e­cu­tors sought the death penal­ty, the tri­al was 3.5 times more expen­sive than if the death penal­ty had not been sought. The cost was more than dou­ble what it would have cost to keep Shulman, 45, in prison for 40 years. The pub­lic cost of Shulman’s sen­tence will con­tin­ue to climb through­out his incar­cer­a­tion. (Newsday, July 12,1999)

Louisiana Lacks Funds to Pay Court-Appointed Private Attorneys for Death Penalty Cases

Several lawyers in Louisiana are ask­ing courts to post­pone death penal­ty cas­es until there is suf­fi­cient fund­ing to pay the attor­neys. Because of a loss in rev­enue, pri­vate attor­neys appoint­ed by the court to han­dle death penal­ty cas­es as well as oth­er crim­i­nal cas­es have not been paid in a year. The lawyers who han­dle these cas­es are con­cerned about the con­se­quences for their clients: I think poor peo­ple get poor rep­re­sen­ta­tion. They are rep­re­sent­ed by over­worked pub­lic defend­ers and pri­vate lawyers who aren’t get­ting paid. That is not equal jus­tice.” (The Advocate, April 51999)

Rural Washington State County’s Anticipated Capital Trial Costs Strain Budget

Because of antic­i­pat­ed death penal­ty tri­al costs, Okanogan County Commissioners in Washington State delayed pay rais­es for the coun­ty’s 350 employ­ees, then approved a 2% increase; the small­est in years. They also decid­ed not to replace 2 of 4 pub­lic-health nurs­es, ordered a halt on non-emer­gency trav­el and put a hold on updat­ing com­put­ers and coun­ty vehi­cles. Okanogan County shares the fate of many oth­er rur­al coun­ties across the coun­try, where death-penal­ty cas­es are drain­ing bud­gets. (Associated Press, April 21999)

Washington State Keeps Inmate with Liver Disease Alive for Execution

Thurston County in Washington State bud­get­ed $346,000 in 1999 alone to seek Mitchell Rupe’s 3rd death sen­tence. Rupe is also dying of liv­er dis­ease. Washington has made extreme efforts to save Rupe from a nat­ur­al death just so it can exe­cute him. Since 1997, Thurston County bud­get­ed near­ly $700,000 for the most recent sen­tenc­ing hear­ing alone — expens­es above the dai­ly costs absorbed by the coun­ty pros­e­cu­tor’s office. (Seattle Times, March 121999)

Execution Cost Ohio Twice as Much as Life Imprisonment

The State of Ohio spent at least $1.5 mil­lion to kill one men­tal­ly ill man who want­ed to be exe­cut­ed. Among the costs were: $18,147 over­time for prison employ­ees and $2,250 over­time for State Highway Patrol offi­cers at the time of the exe­cu­tion. This does not include over­time for 25 prison pub­lic infor­ma­tion offi­cers who worked the night of the exe­cu­tion. The state spent $5,320 on a satel­lite truck so that the offi­cial announce­ment of Wilford Berry’s exe­cu­tion could be beamed to out­side media, and $88.42 for the lethal drugs. Attorney General Betty Montgomery had 5 to 15 pros­e­cu­tors work­ing on the case. Between 5 and 10% of the annu­al bud­get for the state’s cap­i­tal-crimes sec­tion was devot­ed to the Berry case for 5 years. Keeping Berry in prison for his entire life would have cost approx­i­mate­ly half as much. (Columbus Dispatch, February 281999)

Capital Murder Trials and Appeals Weigh on Small County Budgets in Texas

Many small coun­ties are over­whelmed with the finan­cial bur­den of the death penal­ty. These cap­i­tal-mur­der tri­als can dev­as­tate the bud­get of a small coun­ty,” says Allen Amos, one of 55 judges from small west Texas coun­ties in the Rural County Judges Association. If you go to tri­al with an auto­mat­ic appeal, you could be look­ing at $350,000 to $500,000 for each one of these things.”(Christian Science Monitor, February 251999)

Mississippi Counties Lack Money for Death Row Inmates’ Lawyers

In Mississippi, the state has no sys­tem for pro­vid­ing lawyers for death row inmates after their direct appeal. The Mississippi Supreme Court, how­ev­er, has ordered coun­ties to start pay­ing attor­neys for post-con­vic­tion appeals. Chancery Clerk Butch Scipper of Quitman County remarked: We’re prob­a­bly the poor­est coun­ty in the state. We have no cash reserves and noth­ing is bud­get­ed for this type of expense.” He indi­cat­ed they would have to raise tax­es to pay for the death penal­ty. (Biloxi Sun Herald, February 211999)

Indiana Taxpayers Charged Over $2 Million for Defense of Three Capital Cases

In Indiana, three cap­i­tal cas­es cost tax­pay­ers a total of over $2 mil­lion, just for defense costs. (Prosecution costs are usu­al­ly equal or more than defense costs and appel­late costs will add even more expense.) Former death penal­ty pros­e­cu­tor David Cook remarked: If you’re gonna spend this type of mon­ey in a sys­tem where there isn’t much resources to go around, I think that we have a rea­son­able right to expect that we’re gain­ing some­thing by doing this.…We don’t gain any­thing by doing this.” (Indianapolis Star/​News, February 71999)

Washington State Halts Capital Improvements to Pay for One Death Penalty Trial

Officials in Washington State are con­cerned that costs for a sin­gle death penal­ty tri­al will approach $1 mil­lion. To pay for the tri­al, the coun­ty has had to let one gov­ern­ment posi­tion go unfilled, post­poned employ­ee pay hikes, drained its $300,000 con­tin­gency fund and elim­i­nat­ed all cap­i­tal improve­ments. The Sheriff’s request to replace a van which broke down last year for trans­port­ing pris­on­ers has been shelved. (The Spokesman-Review, January 191999)

Louisiana Prosecutor Says Life in Prison is More Economical

According to an arti­cle in the Louisiana Sunday Advertiser, pros­e­cu­tor Phil Haney, who often push­es for the death penal­ty, says if he could be sure life in prison real­ly meant life in prison,’ he would be for abol­ish­ing the death penal­ty. It’s a mat­ter of eco­nom­ics, he said. It just costs too much to exe­cute some­one.” (The Sunday Advertiser, August 231998)

Columnist Says New York Spends $3 Million Extra on Capital Case, But Receives No Added Benefit

Jim Dwyer, colum­nist for the New York Daily News, recent­ly esti­mat­ed that the pro­ject­ed costs of impos­ing the death penal­ty on New York’s first death row inmate, Darrel Harris, will be $3 mil­lion. He con­clud­ed: After spend­ing $3 mil­lion extra for a cap­i­tal case, New York will have bought itself noth­ing that it could not have got­ten with a sen­tence of life with­out parole.” (NY Daily News, July 281998)

Nebraska Judiciary Committee Says Legal Costs of Executions Outweigh Any Savings

A report from the Nebraska Judiciary Committee states that any sav­ings from exe­cut­ing an inmate are out­weighed by the finan­cial legal costs. The report con­clud­ed that the cur­rent death penal­ty law does not serve the best inter­est of Nebraskans. (Neb. Press & Dakotan, January 271998)

Defense Costs in Federal Death Penalty Cases 4 Times Greater than Comparable Non-Capital Cases

In a report from the Judicial Conference of the United States on the costs of the fed­er­al death penal­ty, it was report­ed that the defense costs were about 4 times high­er in cas­es where death was sought than in com­pa­ra­ble cas­es where death was not sought. Moreover, the pros­e­cu­tion costs in death cas­es were 67% high­er than the defense costs, with­out even includ­ing the inves­tiga­tive costs pro­vid­ed by law enforce­ment agen­cies. See, Federal Death Penalty Cases: Recommendations Concerning the Cost and Quality of Defense Representation