American Correctional Association
Annual Conference — Nashville, Tennessee

The Death Penalty Today

Richard C. Dieter
August 142003


I want to thank the American Correctional Association for the invi­ta­tion to speak at this con­fer­ence. It is an hon­or to be here.

Some peo­ple may have the mis­tak­en notion that chal­leng­ing the death penal­ty before mem­bers of this orga­ni­za­tion would be a dif­fi­cult task. But I am aware of the long and proud tra­di­tion of the ACA with regard to the treat­ment of inmates in our cor­rec­tion­al facil­i­ties. In that tra­di­tion, cor­rec­tions are about ser­vice to soci­ety, to all its mem­bers, includ­ing those who are incar­cer­at­ed. The death penal­ty is an expres­sion of a fail­ure in that process. It pro­claims that, for some peo­ple, we just have to give up on the notion of change or respect; we must expel them for­ev­er from the human com­mu­ni­ty, and end their life, with all that such a dras­tic step implies.

The tra­di­tion of the cor­rec­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty, it seems to me, is a very dif­fer­ent one, and it is con­tained in the Preamble to the ACA’s found­ing Principles:

The treat­ment of crim­i­nals by soci­ety is for the pro­tec­tion of soci­ety. But since such treat­ment is direct­ed to the crim­i­nal rather than the crime, its great object should be his moral regen­er­a­tion. The state has not dis­charged its whole duty to the crim­i­nal when it has pun­ished him, nor even when it has reformed him. Having raised him up, it has fur­ther duty to aid in hold­ing him up.“

The death penal­ty is the pole oppo­site of that approach. Once a per­son has been exe­cut­ed, there is no more rais­ing him up,” nor hold­ing him up.” The death penal­ty is not a part of the cor­rec­tion­al sys­tem. I would sub­mit that it is much more a part of the polit­i­cal sys­tem.


Who Receives the Death Penalty?

I am very aware that many peo­ple believe the death penal­ty is nec­es­sary: that there are some crim­i­nals who are just so ter­ri­ble, so dan­ger­ous, so irre­deemable that their exe­cu­tion is the only way of deal­ing with them. Who are the peo­ple we sub­ject to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment? Are they real­ly the worst of the worst,” far more threat­en­ing and unman­age­able than any­one else in our prison sys­tem today? The evi­dence does not even remote­ly sup­port that con­tention.

There are too many mur­ders in this coun­try, but the death penal­ty is not designed to address that prob­lem. Relatively few peo­ple who com­mit mur­der are ever sen­tenced to death, and even few­er are exe­cut­ed — con­sid­er­ably less than 1% who mur­der are exe­cut­ed. Who are in this select group?

In over 80% of the cas­es of those exe­cut­ed in this coun­try, the vic­tim was white, even though blacks are vic­tims in 50% of the mur­ders in the U.S.

What does that say to soci­ety? It says that, when it comes to the death penal­ty, white lives are more valu­able than black lives.


To begin with, those who receive the death penal­ty are far more like­ly to have mur­dered a white per­son than a black per­son. In over 80% of the cas­es of those exe­cut­ed in this coun­try, the vic­tim was white, even though blacks are vic­tims in 50% of the mur­ders in the U.S. Why do the lives of those vic­tims not mer­it the death penal­ty? In study after study, many reviewed by the U.S. General Accounting Office, the con­sis­tent con­clu­sion was that the race of the vic­tim is a deter­min­ing fac­tor in who receives the death penal­ty.

What does that say to soci­ety? It says that, when it comes to the death penal­ty, white lives are more valu­able than black lives. It is not nec­es­sar­i­ly the worst crim­i­nals who are exe­cut­ed under the death penal­ty. Race plays a deci­sive role — and we should not be exe­cut­ing any­body under such a sys­tem.

Another fac­tor that plays a key role in decid­ing who lives and who dies is geog­ra­phy. In our sys­tem, a local pros­e­cu­tor decides whether to seek a death sen­tence in a par­tic­u­lar case. Some pros­e­cu­tors pur­sue it in almost every eli­gi­ble mur­der, some nev­er pur­sue it. You need only com­pare the death penal­ty in Houston, Texas with Austin, Texas, or com­pare Philadelphia with Pittsburgh to see the dif­fer­ence that geog­ra­phy makes. Which side of the street you com­mit your crime on makes a crit­i­cal dif­fer­ence in whether you will receive the death penal­ty.

Geography has oth­er effects as well. Where are the exe­cu­tions car­ried out in the U.S.? Earlier in the 20th cen­tu­ry, New York was a major death penal­ty state and exe­cu­tions occurred in all regions of the coun­try. Today, close to 90% of the exe­cu­tions occur in just one of the four regions of the coun­try – the South. Over half the exe­cu­tions this year have been in just 2 states: Texas and Oklahoma. Executions are not a nation­al phe­nom­e­non in which only the most noto­ri­ous offend­ers are select­ed. Instead, they are almost exclu­sive­ly a south­ern prac­tice – and that is an arbi­trary and unac­cept­able sys­tem, even for those who sup­port cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment.

One might ask: how has the South fared for all its exe­cu­tions? Given the risks of the death penal­ty, the divi­sive­ness it caus­es, and its tremen­dous costs, one might expect that at least it makes those areas that use it a safer place. But look­ing at the sta­tis­tics, the oppo­site is true: the South is con­sis­tent­ly the region of the coun­try with the high­est mur­der rate. Last year, it was the only juris­dic­tion with a mur­der rate above the nation­al aver­age.

States that do not use the death penal­ty are doing far bet­ter when it comes to pre­vent­ing mur­der. The north­east has car­ried out less than 1% of the exe­cu­tions in the coun­try since the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed in 1976. It is the region with con­sis­tent­ly the low­est mur­der rate. And the gap between the mur­der rate in death penal­ty states and that in non-death penal­ty states has been grow­ing in the past decade.

Economics is also an impor­tant fac­tor in deter­min­ing who gets the death penal­ty and who is spared. Almost every­one on death row could not afford his own lawyer at tri­al. Over half of those on death row did not com­plete high school. As a result, they enter a lot­tery in which some defen­dants receive decent court-appoint­ed rep­re­sen­ta­tion, while oth­ers get lawyers who sleep through parts of the tri­al, who arrive in the court­room after a few stiff drinks, or who have nev­er han­dled a cap­i­tal case before. Some of these lawyers you would not want rep­re­sent­ing you in traf­fic court.


Some Are Innocent

The most dis­turb­ing fact about who gets sen­tenced to death in America is that some of those peo­ple are inno­cent. Since the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed, over 100 death row inmates have had their con­vic­tions over­turned and have been freed. Over half of these rever­sals have occurred since 1990; 9 more inmates have been freed in 2003 alone. This is not a prob­lem that is going away — our sys­tem is human and fal­li­ble.

Mistakes can hap­pen any­where in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem, but with the death penal­ty we bury our mis­takes. Once some­one has been exe­cut­ed, it is too late for the courts to make things right. And with so many mis­takes revealed in recent years, we should not be exe­cut­ing any­one. If this were an assem­bly line, and it pro­duced defec­tive prod­ucts that were endan­ger­ing people’s lives, we would close that fac­to­ry; we would recall all those prod­ucts.

Since this con­fer­ence is occur­ring just before September, I am remind­ed of the sto­ry of Anthony Porter. Porter was sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed in September 1998 in Illinois. His lawyers had one last avenue of appeal. Porter was men­tal­ly retard­ed and his attor­neys suc­cess­ful­ly asked the judge for a hear­ing to deter­mine whether he was com­pe­tent enough to be exe­cut­ed. With this for­tu­itous stay of exe­cu­tion, there was an oppor­tu­ni­ty for a jour­nal­ism class at Northwestern University to take Porter’s case as an investigative exercise.

The most dis­turb­ing fact about who gets sen­tenced to death in America is that some of those peo­ple are inno­cent. Since the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed, over 100 death row inmates have had their con­vic­tions over­turned and have been freed.


The stu­dents assigned to Porter’s case tried to re-enact the scene of the crime, but the descrip­tion from the tri­al would not match the real scene. They next con­tact­ed one of the wit­ness­es. Amazingly, she admit­ted that she had lied about Porter at his tri­al. Moreover, she led the stu­dents to the actu­al killer, who even­tu­al­ly con­fessed to the crime on video­tape. Porter was freed from death row in Illinois, walk­ing out into the sun­shine and the arms of the jour­nal­ism stu­dents. Not long after, a mora­to­ri­um was declared on all exe­cu­tions in Illinois.

It is a won­der­ful sto­ry, but it so eas­i­ly could have end­ed dif­fer­ent­ly. If Anthony Porter had been of nor­mal intel­li­gence, he would have been exe­cut­ed on sched­ule. If his stay had occurred in November, his case might nev­er have been inves­ti­gat­ed by any stu­dents. If the stu­dents had not cut oth­er class­es to pur­sue Porter’s case, they might nev­er have found the wit­ness who exposed the truth. This is not an exam­ple of the sys­tem work­ing well. And many of the oth­er exon­er­a­tions from death row have also been pure­ly for­tu­itous.


Costs of the Death Penalty

If mil­lions of dol­lars are spent on the death penal­ty, then that mon­ey is not avail­able for more police, or bet­ter light­ing in crime areas, or for corrections.

Compared to the costs of risk­ing an inno­cent life, the finan­cial costs of the death penal­ty are of less impor­tance. But soci­ety only has a lim­it­ed amount of mon­ey to spend on safe­ty. If mil­lions of dol­lars are spent on the death penal­ty, then that mon­ey is not avail­able for more police, or bet­ter light­ing in crime areas, or for cor­rec­tions. The death penal­ty is spend­ing mil­lions and mil­lions of tax­pay­er dol­lars with very lit­tle to show for it. California, for exam­ple, has over 600 peo­ple on death row; they spend approx­i­mate­ly $100 mil­lion per year on the death penal­ty beyond the ordi­nary costs of the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. The state aver­ages less than one exe­cu­tion per year — that amounts to $100 mil­lion for one exe­cu­tion! It is absurd. And not one pen­ny spent on the death penal­ty goes toward cor­rec­tions, where it might do some good.


What About the Victims?

But what about the vic­tims? Even if the death penal­ty is unfair­ly admin­is­tered, and makes too many mis­takes, and even if it does not make soci­ety safer and costs hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars, at least it serves the vic­tims of crime.

Today, many vic­tims’ fam­i­lies are turn­ing away from the death penal­ty. For one thing, the death penal­ty pro­duces divi­sion in the vic­tims’ com­mu­ni­ty and dis­ap­point­ment for 99% of the fam­i­lies involved. Since less than 1% of those who com­mit mur­der are ever exe­cut­ed, the fam­i­lies in the rest of the cas­es may feel cheat­ed that their loved one was some­how short changed. And even where the death penal­ty is the reward,” it will only occur after 10 long years of uncer­tain­ty before an exe­cu­tion is car­ried out. Most like­ly, the case will be over­turned at least once, it will be tried again, and in many instances a dif­fer­ent sen­tence will result. We should not be putting vic­tims through such a roller coast­er of unpre­dictabil­i­ty. They should know right from the start that an exe­cu­tion is one of the least like­ly out­comes in their case.

The death penal­ty is lit­er­al­ly falling apart at the seams. Judging by the 50% decline in death sen­tences, by the grow­ing rejec­tion of this pun­ish­ment around the world, and by the decreas­ing sup­port even in this coun­try, it is like­ly that its days are num­bered. I believe that we are see­ing a trend in soci­ety to put its trust in the cor­rec­tion­al sys­tem that is already keep­ing soci­ety safe from over 99% of vio­lent con­vict­ed crim­i­nals.

Conclusion

The death penal­ty is lit­er­al­ly falling apart at the seams. Judging by the 50% decline in death sen­tences, by the grow­ing rejec­tion of this pun­ish­ment around the world, and by the decreas­ing sup­port even in this coun­try, it is like­ly that its days are num­bered. I believe that we are see­ing a trend in soci­ety to put its trust in the cor­rec­tion­al sys­tem that is already keep­ing soci­ety safe from over 99% of vio­lent con­vict­ed crim­i­nals. I believe the cor­rec­tion­al sys­tem would do a much bet­ter job with the peo­ple who are cur­rent­ly sen­tenced to death. It would not be sat­is­fied that it has dis­charged its whole duty when it has pun­ished” but hav­ing raised him up,” it would meet its fur­ther duty to aid in hold­ing him up,” regard­less of how ter­ri­ble the crime. Of one thing I am sure: the death penal­ty sys­tem has been tried and it has failed.

THANK YOU.