About one-quar­ter of Ohio’s death row inmates come from Hamilton County (Cincinnati), but only 9% of the state’s mur­ders occur there. (R. Willing and G. Fields, Geography of the Death Penalty, USA Today, Dec. 201999).

Baltimore City had only one per­son on Maryland’s death row, but sub­ur­ban Baltimore County, with one tenth as many mur­ders as the city, had nine times the num­ber on death row. (L. Montgomery, Md. Questioning Local Extremes on Death Penalty, Wash. Post, May 122002).

An inves­ti­ga­tion by sev­en Indiana news­pa­pers in 2001 found that the death penal­ty depend­ed on fac­tors such as the views of indi­vid­ual pros­e­cu­tors and the finan­cial resources of the coun­ty. Two Indiana coun­ties have pro­duced almost as many death sen­tences as all of the oth­er Indiana coun­ties com­bined. (S. Bend Trib., Oct. 212001).

In New York, which abol­ished the death penal­ty in 2007, upstate coun­ties expe­ri­enced just 19% of the state’s homi­cides, but they nonethe­less account­ed for 61% of all cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tions. Three coun­ties (out of 62 in the state) account­ed for over one-third of all cas­es in which a death notice was filed. (Capital Punishment in New York State: Statistics from Six Years of Representation, Report from the Capital Defender Office, Sept. 2001 (data through June 302001)).