On June 29, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Oklahoma pris­on­ers’ lethal injec­tion chal­lenge in Glossip v. Gross. In a sweep­ing dis­sent­ing opin­ion, Justice Stephen Breyer, joined by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, raised seri­ous ques­tions about the admin­is­tra­tion of the death penal­ty. Below are excerpts from the opin­ion with links to the DPIC resources cit­ed in that opinion. 

  • Today’s admin­is­tra­tion of the death penal­ty involves three fun­da­men­tal con­sti­tu­tion­al defects: (1) seri­ous unre­li­a­bil­i­ty, (2) arbi­trari­ness in appli­ca­tion, and (3) uncon­scionably long delays that under­mine the death penalty’s peno­log­i­cal pur­pose. Perhaps as a result, (4) most places with­in the United States have aban­doned its use.
  • [T]he evi­dence that the death penal­ty has been wrong­ly imposed (whether or not it was car­ried out), is strik­ing. As of 2002, this Court used the word dis­turb­ing” to describe the num­ber of instances in which indi­vid­u­als had been sen­tenced to death but lat­er exonerated…Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC), Innocence: List of Those Freed from Death Row, online at DPIC Innocence List
  • Despite the Gregg Court’s hope for fair admin­is­tra­tion of the death penal­ty, 40 years of fur­ther expe­ri­ence make it increas­ing­ly clear that the death penal­ty is imposed arbi­trar­i­ly, i.e., with­out the rea­son­able con­sis­ten­cy” legal­ly nec­es­sary to rec­on­cile its use with the Constitution’s commands.
  • Geography also plays an impor­tant role in deter­min­ing who is sen­tenced to death…[W]ithin a death penal­ty State, the impo­si­tion of the death penal­ty heav­i­ly depends on the coun­ty in which a defen­dant is tried…Between 2004 and 2009, for exam­ple, just 29 coun­ties (few­er than 1% of coun­ties in the coun­try) account­ed for approx­i­mate­ly half of all death sen­tences imposed nation­wide. Smith 233. And in 2012, just 59 coun­ties (few­er than 2% of coun­ties in the coun­try) account­ed for all death sen­tences imposed nation­wide. DPIC, The 2% Death Penalty: How A Minority of Counties Produce Most Death Cases At Enormous Costs to All 9 (Oct. 2013).
  • The length of the aver­age delay has increased dramati­cally over the years. In 1960, the aver­age delay between sen­tenc­ing and exe­cu­tion was two years…Ten years ago (in 2004) the aver­age delay was about 11 years…By last year the aver­age had risen to about 18 years. DPIC, Execution List 2014, supra.
  • I rec­og­nize that a lack of evi­dence” for a propo­si­tion does not prove the con­trary. See Ring, supra, at 615 (one might believe the stud­ies incon­clu­sive”). But sup­pose that we add to these stud­ies the fact that, today, very few of those sen­tenced to death are actu­al­ly exe­cut­ed, and that even those exe­cu­tions occur, on aver­age, after near­ly two decades on death row. DPIC, Execution List 2014, supra. Then, does it still seem like­ly that the death penal­ty has a sig­nif­i­cant deterrent effect?
  • In 1999, 279 per­sons were sen­tenced to death. BJS 2013 Stats, at 19 (Table 16). Last year, just 73 per­sons were sen­tenced to death. DPIC, The Death Penalty in 2014: Year End Re­port 1 (2015)…That trend, a sig­nif­i­cant decline in the last 15 years, also holds true with respect to the num­ber of annu­al exe­cu­tions. See Appendix B, infra (show­ing exe­cu­tions from 1977 – 2014). In 1999, 98 peo­ple were exe­cut­ed. BJS, Data Collection: National Prisoner Statistics Program (BJS Prisoner Statistics) (avail­able in Clerk of Court’s case file). Last year, that num­ber was only 35. DPIC, The Death Penalty in 2014, supra, at 1.
  • [T]he direc­tion of change is con­sis­tent. In the past two decades, no State with­out a death penal­ty has passed leg­is­la­tion to rein­state the penal­ty. See Atkins, supra, at 315 – 316; DPIC, States With and Without the Death Penalty, supra. Indeed, even in many States most asso­ci­at­ed with the death penal­ty, remark­able shifts have occurred. In Texas, the State that car­ries out the most exe­cu­tions, the num­ber of exe­cu­tions fell from 40 in 2000 to 10 in 2014, and the num­ber of death sen­tences fell from 48 in 1999 to 9 in 2013 (and 0 thus far in 2015). DPIC, Executions by State and Year.
  • For the rea­sons I have set forth in this opin­ion, I believe it high­ly like­ly that the death penal­ty vio­lates the Eighth Amendment. At the very least, the Court should call for full brief­ing on the basic question.