NEW YORK TIMES

By RAYMOND BONNER and FORD FESSENDEN

The dozen states that have cho­sen not to enact the death penal­ty since the Supreme Court ruled in 1976 that it was con­sti­tu­tion­al­ly per­mis­si­ble have not had high­er homi­cide rates than states with the death penal­ty, gov­ern­ment sta­tis­tics and a new sur­vey by The New York Times show.

Indeed, 10 of the 12 states with­out cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment have homi­cide rates below the nation­al aver­age, Federal Bureau of Investigation data shows, while half the states with the death penal­ty have homi­cide rates above the nation­al aver­age. In a state-by- state analy­sis, The Times found that dur­ing the last 20 years, the homi­cide rate in states with the death penal­ty has been 48 per­cent to 101 per­cent high­er than in states with­out the death penalty.

The study by The Times also found that homi­cide rates had risen and fall­en along rough­ly sym­met­ri­cal paths in the states with and with­out the death penal­ty, sug­gest­ing to many experts that the threat of the death penal­ty rarely deters criminals.

It is dif­fi­cult to make the case for any deter­rent effect from these num­bers,” said Steven Messner, a crim­i­nol­o­gist at the State University of New York at Albany, who reviewed the analy­sis by The Times. Whatever the fac­tors are that affect change in homi­cide rates, they don’t seem to oper­ate dif­fer­ent­ly based on the pres­ence or absence of the death penal­ty in a state.”

That is one of the argu­ments most fre­quent­ly made against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in states with­out the death penal­ty — that and the asser­tion that it is dif­fi­cult to mete out fair­ly. Opponents also main­tain that it is too expen­sive to pros­e­cute and that life with­out parole is a more effi­cient form of punishment.

Prosecutors and offi­cials in states that have the death penal­ty are as pas­sion­ate about the issue as their coun­ter­parts in states that do not have cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. While they rec­og­nize that it is dif­fi­cult to make the case for deter­rence, they con­tend that there are pow­er­ful rea­sons to car­ry out exe­cu­tions. Rehabilitation is inef­fec­tive, they argue, and cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is often the only penal­ty that match­es the hor­rif­ic nature of some crimes. Furthermore, they say, soci­ety has a right to ret­ri­bu­tion and the final­i­ty of an exe­cu­tion can bring clo­sure for vic­tims’ families.

Polls show that these views are shared by a large num­ber of Americans. And, cer­tain­ly, most states have death penal­ty statutes. Twelve states have cho­sen oth­er­wise, but their expe­ri­ences have been large­ly over­looked in recent dis­cus­sions about capital punishment.

I think Michigan made a wise deci­sion 150 years ago,” said the state’s gov­er­nor, John Engler, a Republican. Michigan abol­ished the death penal­ty in 1846 and has resist­ed attempts to rein­state it. We’re pret­ty proud of the fact that we don’t have the death penal­ty,” Governor Engler said, adding that he opposed the death penal­ty on moral and pragmatic grounds.

Governor Engler said he was not swayed by polls that showed 60 per­cent of Michigan res­i­dents favored the death penal­ty. He said 100 per­cent would like not to pay taxes.

In addi­tion to Michigan, and its Midwestern neigh­bors Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and Wisconsin, the states with­out the death penal­ty are Alaska, Hawaii, West Virginia, Rhode Island, Vermont, Maine and Massachusetts, where an effort to rein­state it was defeat­ed last year.

No sin­gle fac­tor explains why these states have cho­sen not to impose cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Culture and reli­gion play a role, as well as polit­i­cal vagaries in each state. In West Virginia, for instance, the state’s largest news­pa­per, The Charleston Gazette, sup­port­ed a dri­ve to abol­ish the death penal­ty there in 1965. Repeated efforts to rein­state the death penal­ty have been rebuffed by the legislature.

The argu­ments for and against the death penal­ty have not changed much. At Michigan’s con­sti­tu­tion­al con­ven­tion in 1961, the del­e­gates heard argu­ments that the death penal­ty was not a deter­rent, that those exe­cut­ed were usu­al­ly the poor and dis­ad­van­taged, and that inno­cent peo­ple had been sen­tenced to death.

The same argu­ments are being made today,” said Eugene G. Wanger, who had intro­duced the lan­guage to enshrine a ban on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Michigan’s con­sti­tu­tion at that con­ven­tion. The del­e­gates over­whelm­ing­ly adopt­ed the ban, 141 to 3. Mr. Wanger said two- thirds of the del­e­gates were Republicans, like him­self, and most were con­ser­v­a­tive. Last year, a for­mer state police offi­cer intro­duced leg­is­la­tion to rein­state the death penal­ty. He did not even get the sup­port of the state police asso­ci­a­tion, and the legislation died.

In Minnesota, which abol­ished cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1911, 60 per­cent of the res­i­dents sup­port the death penal­ty, said Susan Gaertner, a career pros­e­cu­tor in St. Paul and the elect­ed coun­ty attor­ney there since 1994. But pub­lic sen­ti­ment had not trans­lat­ed into leg­isla­tive action, Ms. Gaertner said. The pub­lic pol­i­cy mak­ers in Minnesota think the death penal­ty is not effi­cient, it is not a deter­rent, it is a divi­sive form of pun­ish­ment that we sim­ply don’t need,” she said.

In Honolulu, the pros­e­cut­ing attor­ney, Peter Carlisle, said he had changed his views about cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, becom­ing an oppo­nent, after look­ing at the crime sta­tis­tics and find­ing a cor­re­la­tion between declines in gen­er­al crimes and in the homi­cide rates. When the small­er crimes go down — the qual­i­ty of life crimes — then the mur­der rate goes down,” Mr. Carlisle said.

Therefore, he said, it was prefer­able to spend the resources avail­able to him pros­e­cut­ing these gen­er­al crimes. Prosecuting a cap­i­tal case is extreme­ly expen­sive,” he said.

By the very nature of the grav­i­ty of the case, defense lawyers and pros­e­cu­tors spend far more time on a cap­i­tal case than a non­cap­i­tal one. It takes longer to pick a jury, longer for the state to present its case and longer for the defense to put on its wit­ness­es. There are also con­sid­er­ably greater expens­es for expert wit­ness­es, includ­ing psy­chol­o­gists and, these days, DNA experts. Then come the defen­dan­t’s appeals, which can be con­sid­er­able, but are not the biggest cost of the case, prosecutors say.

Mr. Carlisle said his views on the death penal­ty had not been affect­ed by the case of Bryan K. Uyesugi, a Xerox copy machine repair­man who gunned down sev­en co-work­ers last November in the worst mass mur­der in Hawaii’s his­to­ry. Mr. Uyesugi was con­vict­ed in June and is serv­ing life with­out chance of parole.

Mr. Carlisle has doubts about whether the death penal­ty is a deter­rent. We haven’t had the death penal­ty, but we have one of the low­est mur­der rates in the coun­try,” he said. The F.B.I.‘s sta­tis­tics for 1998, the last year for which the data is avail­able, showed Hawaii’s homi­cide rate was the fifth-lowest.

The homi­cide rate in North Dakota, which does not have the death penal­ty, was low­er than the homi­cide rate in South Dakota, which does have it, accord­ing to F.B.I. sta­tis­tics for 1998. Massachusetts, which abol­ished cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1984, has a low­er rate than Connecticut, which has six peo­ple on death row; the homi­cide rate in West Virginia is 30 per­cent below that of Virginia, which has one of the high­est exe­cu­tion rates in the country.

Other fac­tors affect homi­cide rates, of course, includ­ing unem­ploy­ment and demo­graph­ics, as well as the amount of mon­ey spent on police, pros­e­cu­tors and prisons.

But the analy­sis by The Times found that the demo­graph­ic pro­file of states with the death penal­ty is not far dif­fer­ent from that of states with­out it. The pover­ty rate in states with the death penal­ty, as a whole, was 13.4 per­cent in 1990, com­pared with 11.4 per­cent in states with­out the death penalty.

Mr. Carlisle’s pre­de­ces­sor in Honolulu, Keith M. Kaneshiro, agrees with him about deter­rence. I don’t think there’s a proven study that says it’s a deter­rent,” Mr. Kaneshiro said. Still, he said, he believed that exe­cu­tion was war­rant­ed for some crimes, like a con­tract killing or the slay­ing of a police offi­cer. Twice while he was pros­e­cut­ing attor­ney, Mr. Kaneshiro got a leg­is­la­tor to intro­duce a lim­it­ed death penal­ty bill, but, he said, they went nowhere.

In gen­er­al, Mr. Kaneshiro said, Hawaiians fear that the death penal­ty would be giv­en dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly to racial minori­ties and the poor.

In Milwaukee, the dis­trict attor­ney for the last 32 years, E. Michael McCann, shares the view that the death penal­ty is applied unfair­ly to minori­ties. It is rare that a wealthy white man gets exe­cut­ed, if it hap­pens at all,” Mr. McCann said.

Those who have labored long in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem know, sup­port­ed by a vari­ety of stud­ies and exten­sive per­son­al expe­ri­ence, that blacks get the harsh­er hand in crim­i­nal jus­tice and par­tic­u­lar­ly in cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment cas­es,” Mr. McCann wrote in Opposing Capital Punishment: A Prosecutor’s Perspective,” pub­lished in the Marquette Law Review in 1996. Forty-three per­cent of the peo­ple on death row across the coun­try are African-Americans, accord­ing to the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

The death penal­ty also has been employed much more often when the vic­tim was white — 82 per­cent of the vic­tims of death row inmates were white, while only 50 per­cent of all homi­cide vic­tims were white.

Supporters of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment who say that exe­cu­tions are jus­ti­fied by the heinous nature of some crimes often cite the case of Jeffrey L. Dahmer, the ser­i­al killer who mur­dered and dis­mem­bered at least 17 boys and men, and ate flesh from at least one of his victims.

Mr. McCann pros­e­cut­ed Mr. Dahmer, but the case did not dis­suade him from his con­vic­tions on the death penal­ty. To par­tic­i­pate in the killing of anoth­er human being, it dimin­ish­es the respect for life. Period,” Mr. McCann said. He added, Although I am a dis­trict attor­ney, I have a gut sus­pi­cion of the state wield­ing the pow­er of the death over anybody.”

In Detroit, John O’Hair, the dis­trict attor­ney, sim­i­lar­ly pon­ders the role of the state when look­ing at the death penalty.

Borrowing from Justice Louis E. Brandeis, Mr. O’Hair said: Government is a teacher, for good or for bad, but gov­ern­ment should set the exam­ple. I do not believe that gov­ern­ment engag­ing in vio­lence or ret­ri­bu­tion is the right exam­ple. You don’t solve vio­lence by committing violence.”

Detroit has one of the high­est homi­cide rates in the United States — five times more than New York in 1998 — but Mr. O’Hair said bring­ing back the death penal­ty is not the answer.

I do not think the death penal­ty is a deter­rent of any con­se­quence in pre­vent­ing mur­ders,” said Mr. O’Hair, who has been a pros­e­cu­tor and judge for 30 years. Most homi­cides, he said, are impul­sive actions, crimes of pas­sion,” in which the killers do not con­sid­er the con­se­quences of what they are doing.

Nor, appar­ent­ly, do the peo­ple of Detroit see the death penal­ty as a way of cut­ting crime. Only 45 per­cent of Detroit res­i­dents favored cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, a poll by EPIC/​MRA, a polling orga­ni­za­tion in Lansing, Mich., found last year; in Michigan over all, 59 per­cent favored exe­cu­tions, which is rough­ly the lev­el of sup­port for the death penalty nationally.

To illus­trate the point that killers rarely con­sid­ered the con­se­quences of their actions, a pros­e­cu­tor in Des Moines, John Sarcone, described the case of four peo­ple who mur­dered two elder­ly women. They killed one in Iowa, but drove the oth­er one across the bor­der to Missouri, a state that has the death penalty.

Mr. Sarcone said Iowa pros­e­cu­tors were divid­ed on the death penal­ty, and leg­is­la­tion to rein­state it was reject­ed by the Republican-con­trolled leg­is­la­ture in 1997. The big issue was cost, he said.

Last year in Michigan, Larry Julian, a Republican from a rur­al dis­trict, intro­duced leg­is­la­tion that would put the death penal­ty option to a referendum.

But Mr. Julian, a retired state police offi­cer, had almost no polit­i­cal sup­port for the bill, not even from the Michigan State Troopers Association, he said, and the bill died with­out a full vote. The Catholic Church lob­bied against it.

State offi­cials in Michigan are gen­er­al­ly sat­is­fied with the cur­rent law. Our poli­cies in Michigan have worked with­out the death penal­ty,” said Matthew Davis, spokesman for the Michigan Department of Corrections. Instituting it now may not be the most effec­tive use of people’s money.”

Today in Michigan, 2,572 inmates are serv­ing sen­tences of life with­out parole, and they tend to cause few­er prob­lems than the gen­er­al prison pop­u­la­tion, Mr. Davis said.

They are gen­er­al­ly qui­eter, not as inso­lent, more like­ly to obey the rules and less like­ly to try to escape, he said. Their moti­va­tion is quite clear, he said: to get into a low­er secu­ri­ty clas­si­fi­ca­tion. When they come in, they are locked up 23 hours a day, 7 days a week, and fed through a small hole in the door. After a long peri­od of good behav­ior, they can live in a larg­er cell, which is part of a larg­er, brighter room, eat with 250 oth­er pris­on­ers, and watch television.

One thing they can­not look for­ward to is get­ting out. In Michigan, life with­out parole means you stay in prison your entire nat­ur­al life, not that you get out after 30 or 40 years, Mr. Davis said.

In many states, when life with­out parole is an option the pub­lic’s sup­port for the death penal­ty drops sharply. The fact that we have life with­out parole takes a lot of impe­tus from peo­ple who would like to see the death penal­ty,” said Ms. Gaertner, the chief pros­e­cu­tor in St. Paul.

In most states with the death penal­ty, life with­out parole is not an option for juries. In Texas, pros­e­cu­tors have suc­cess­ful­ly lob­bied against leg­is­la­tion that would give juries the option of life with­out parole instead of the death penalty.

Mr. Davis said a desire to extract a pound of flesh” was behind many of the argu­ments for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. But that pound of flesh comes at a high­er price than a life­time of incarceration.”

Mr. O’Hair, the Detroit pros­e­cu­tor said, If you’re after ret­ri­bu­tion, vengeance, life in prison with­out parole is about as puni­tive as you can get.”