Testimony of
Richard C. Dieter
Executive Director, Death Penalty Information Center
Before the
Legislative Commission’s Subcommittee to Study
the Death Penalty and Related DNA Testing

Assembly and Senate of Nevada
Las Vegas, Nevada

April 18, 2002
via video­con­fer­ence

INTRODUCTION

Good after­noon. Madam Chair, and Members of the Committee. I want to thank you for this oppor­tu­ni­ty to appear before you and to offer my remarks on the costs of the death penalty.

My name is Richard Dieter and I am the Executive Director of the Death Penalty Information Center in Washington, DC, a posi­tion I have held for the past 10 years. I am also an attor­ney and an adjunct pro­fes­sor at Catholic University Law School. The Death Penalty Information Center is a non-prof­it orga­ni­za­tion whose focus is research and analy­sis of capital punishment.

I com­mend your efforts to study this impor­tant issue which has gen­er­at­ed so much debate over the past few years, and indeed, for many years before. I think it is prop­er that the sub­ject of costs appears as one of the last top­ics you are con­sid­er­ing. But I don’t think it is last because it is unim­por­tant. To the con­trary, I believe costs are the linch­pin for many of the oth­er issues relat­ed to capital punishment.

Beyond the fis­cal con­sid­er­a­tions, costs are cen­tral to this debate for two rea­sons:
First, when we dis­cuss the death penal­ty, what we are real­ly talk­ing about is the safe­ty of the com­mu­ni­ty. There are many ways to make the com­mu­ni­ty safer, and most of these have costs asso­ci­at­ed with them. As leg­is­la­tors, you are keen­ly aware that there is no bot­tom­less pot of gov­ern­ment mon­ey to be spent on things that might help the com­mu­ni­ty. The more you spend on one project, the less there is avail­able for oth­er worthwhile endeavors.

So, if it turns out that the death penal­ty amounts to a net expense to the state and the tax­pay­ers, then it must be paid for at the expense of oth­er projects. Or to put it anoth­er way, the extra mon­ey spent on the death penal­ty could be spent on oth­er means of mak­ing the com­mu­ni­ty safer: bet­ter light­ing in crime areas, more police on the streets, per­haps longer peri­ods of incar­cer­a­tion for some offend­ers, or on projects to reduce unemployment.

Secondly, the costs of the death penal­ty are cen­tral because they play the key role in how the death penal­ty is imple­ment­ed. Supporters and oppo­nents of the death penal­ty agree that a sys­tem of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment should not take unnec­es­sary risks with inno­cent lives and should be applied with a strict sense of fair­ness. In releas­ing its report on the death penal­ty in Illinois on Monday, Gov. Ryan’s blue rib­bon com­mis­sion stressed that many of their rec­om­men­da­tions for imple­ment­ing the death penal­ty would require increased state expen­di­tures.1 As with many things, the death penal­ty on the cheap is real­ly no bar­gain. There is no abstract dol­lar fig­ure for the cost of the death penal­ty — it depends on what kind of death penal­ty you want.

COST STUDIES
I wish I could tell you exact­ly how much the death penal­ty costs in Nevada. But Nevada is like most states: they have not con­duct­ed a recent in-depth study of how much this gov­ern­ment pro­gram is cost­ing. It turns out to be a decep­tive­ly com­plex sub­ject: it’s like try­ing to put a dol­lar fig­ure on heart dis­ease — it’s easy to state the ques­tion, but com­pli­cat­ed to answer. Nevertheless, there have been some stud­ies by gov­ern­ment agen­cies, by the media, and by inde­pen­dent researchers that cre­ate a clearer picture.

The stud­ies dif­fer wide­ly in the states they cov­er, in their lev­el of sophis­ti­ca­tion and in the assump­tions they make. The sur­pris­ing result, how­ev­er, is that they have all come to the same con­clu­sion, and their esti­mates of the costs are fair­ly close to each oth­er. In fact, I am aware of no care­ful study that con­tra­dicts the con­clu­sion that a death penal­ty sys­tem is con­sid­er­ably more expen­sive than a sys­tem in which life impris­on­ment is the most severe punishment.

COMMON PARAMETERS OF THE STUDIES
Before I dis­cuss the actu­al esti­mates for the costs of the death penal­ty, I think it would be help­ful to point out some com­mon­al­ties in these stud­ies. Typically, cost stud­ies state their con­clu­sions in terms of the net cost per exe­cu­tion. None of these stud­ies focus on the costs of the actu­al exe­cu­tion, which rep­re­sents a neg­li­gi­ble amount com­pared to the costs of get­ting to that point. The cost per exe­cu­tion is mere­ly a con­ve­nient way of express­ing the total expense in a rate that is com­pa­ra­ble from state to state.

Most of these stud­ies do not sim­ply look at the costs of an iso­lat­ed case. Rather the best analy­sis com­pares a sys­tem in which the death penal­ty is employed to a sys­tem deal­ing with sim­i­lar crimes in which a life sen­tence is the most severe pun­ish­ment allowed. At every step of the analy­sis, the ques­tion is asked: how much more, or less, does the sys­tem with the death penal­ty cost com­pared to the other system?

There is no doubt that the death penal­ty costs more in all the steps lead­ing up to an exe­cu­tion. Everything that is need­ed for an ordi­nary tri­al is need­ed for a death penal­ty case, only more so:

  • more pre-tri­al time will be need­ed to pre­pare: cas­es typ­i­cal­ly take a year to come to trial
  • more pre-tri­al motions will be filed and answered
  • more experts will be hired
  • prob­a­bly two attor­neys will be appoint­ed for the defense, and a com­pa­ra­ble team for the pros­e­cu­tion, com­pared to one in a non-death penalty case
  • jurors will have to be indi­vid­u­al­ly quizzed on their views about the death penalty
  • they are more like­ly to be sequestered
  • two tri­als instead of one will be con­duct­ed: one for guilt and one for punishment
  • the tri­al will be longer: the cost study at Duke University esti­mat­ed that death penal­ty tri­als take 3 to 5 times longer than typ­i­cal murder trials
  • and then will come a series of appeals dur­ing which the inmates are held in the high secu­ri­ty of death row.

It is only after an exe­cu­tion that the death penal­ty might actu­al­ly cost less than a non-death penal­ty sys­tem. However, few cas­es result in exe­cu­tion, so the sav­ings are relatively small.

The bulk of the costs of the death penal­ty come not from the cas­es that end in exe­cu­tions, but rather from the many cas­es which end shy of the death penal­ty being car­ried out. The death penal­ty is only imposed in a frac­tion of the cas­es in which it is sought. Death penal­ty cas­es may end in a plea bar­gain with a less­er sen­tence, they may end in a tri­al with a ver­dict of acquit­tal or of guilt to a less­er offense, or they may end with a life sen­tence even when death was an option. But because they began as death penal­ty cas­es, the meter of high­er expense is run­ning all the time.

Even more impor­tant­ly, if the record for the past 25 years is any gauge, then very few of the death sen­tences that are hand­ed down will ever be car­ried out. Roughly speak­ing, there have been about 7,000 death sen­tences since the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed, and a lit­tle over 700 exe­cu­tions car­ried out.2 Nevada’s expe­ri­ence is typ­i­cal. Over 133 death sen­tences have been hand­ed down, but only 9 exe­cu­tions have been car­ried out. That means that only about 10% of death sen­tences result in exe­cu­tions, but extra costs are incurred for all 100% of the cases.

The recent study by Professor James Liebman of Columbia Law School, whom I believe has already tes­ti­fied before this com­mit­tee, found that over 2/​3 of death penal­ty cas­es are over­turned on appeal.3 And when these cas­es are retried, over 80% of the defen­dants receive a sen­tence of less than death. Only about 5% of the sen­tences result­ed in exe­cu­tions. The excel­lent cost study con­duct­ed at Duke University sim­i­lar­ly applied an exe­cu­tion rate of 10% in cal­cu­lat­ing the costs in North Carolina.4

What this means is that the cost of the death penal­ty is so high because it is an incred­i­bly inef­fi­cient sys­tem. The only pos­si­ble finan­cial sav­ing occurs after there is an exe­cu­tion. From that point on, the state does not have to pay the costs of hous­ing and car­ing for the inmate, while in the non-death penal­ty juris­dic­tion, the costs con­tin­ue as the life sen­tence is served.

But in over 90% of the cas­es, the states pays both ways: it pays the extra expense of seek­ing the death penal­ty, and then, because the death penal­ty is not car­ried out, it also pays the costs of life impris­on­ment. This explains why the death penal­ty, as a sys­tem, costs so much.

One final impor­tant point about the bet­ter cost stud­ies: many of the costs of the death penal­ty do not appear as line items in the bud­get. It is not accu­rate to say that the time spent by the pros­e­cu­tion, by the judges, and even in some instances by the defense, could be cal­cu­lat­ed as no expense because, if these par­tic­i­pants weren’t doing death penal­ty cas­es, they would still have to be paid the same. This ignores what the stud­ies call oppor­tu­ni­ty costs.” Time is mon­ey. If a pros­e­cu­tor or judge works longer on a case because it is a death penal­ty case, then those hours are not avail­able for oth­er work. The same is true for the judge’s staff, and even for the square feet of the court­room used for the tri­al. If death penal­ty cas­es take more time, then that time dif­fer­ence is a net cost mea­sured in the hours of all the participants.

HOW MUCH DOES THE DEATH PENALTY COST?
The major cost stud­ies on the death penal­ty all indi­cate that it is much more expen­sive than a sys­tem where the most severe sen­tence is life in prison:

  • The most com­pre­hen­sive study con­duct­ed in this coun­try found that the death penal­ty costs North Carolina $2.16 mil­lion per exe­cu­tion over the costs of a non-death penal­ty sys­tem impos­ing a max­i­mum sen­tence of impris­on­ment for life.5 As I men­tioned ear­li­er, these find­ings are sen­si­tive to the num­ber of exe­cu­tions the state car­ries out. However, the authors not­ed that even if the death penal­ty was 100% effi­cient, i.e., if every death sen­tence result­ed in an exe­cu­tion, the extra costs to the tax­pay­ers would still be $216,000 per execution.
  • Some years ago, the Miami Herald esti­mat­ed that the costs of the death penal­ty in Florida were $3.2 mil­lion per exe­cu­tion, based on the rate of exe­cu­tions at that time.6 Florida’s death penal­ty sys­tem has bogged down for a num­ber of rea­sons, includ­ing a con­tro­ver­sy over the elec­tric chair. As a result, a more recent esti­mate of the costs in Florida by the Palm Beach Post found a much high­er cost per exe­cu­tion: Florida spends $51 mil­lion a year above and beyond what it would cost to pun­ish all first-degree mur­der­ers with life in prison with­out parole. Based on the 44 exe­cu­tions Florida had car­ried out from 1976 to 2000, that amounts to a cost of $24 mil­lion for each execution.7
  • In Texas, the Dallas Morning News con­clud­ed that a death penal­ty case costs an aver­age of $2.3 mil­lion, about three times the cost of impris­on­ing some­one in a sin­gle cell at the high­est secu­ri­ty lev­el for 40 years.8
  • The Sacramento Bee found that death penal­ty costs California $90 mil­lion annu­al­ly beyond the ordi­nary costs of the jus­tice sys­tem — $78 mil­lion of that total is incurred at the tri­al lev­el. Since California has aver­aged much less than one exe­cu­tion per year, the costs per exe­cu­tion are astronomical.9


A vari­ety of oth­er stud­ies in New York, Kansas, Nebraska and on the fed­er­al lev­el also found high expens­es asso­ci­at­ed with the death penal­ty, though none of these cal­cu­lat­ed the costs through­out the whole process. In a report from the Judicial Conference of the United States on the costs of the fed­er­al death penal­ty, it was report­ed that 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, even before includ­ing the inves­tiga­tive costs of law enforce­ment agencies.10

A recent arti­cle in the Wall Street Journal not­ed that in states where coun­ties are chiefly respon­si­ble for pros­e­cut­ing cap­i­tal cas­es, the expens­es can put an extra­or­di­nary bur­den on local bud­gets, com­pa­ra­ble to that caused by a nat­ur­al disaster.11 Katherine Baicker at Dartmouth pub­lished a study con­cern­ing the Budgetary Repercussions of Capital Convictions” and con­clud­ed that the cap­i­tal cas­es have a large neg­a­tive shock” on coun­ty bud­gets, often requir­ing an increase in tax­es. She esti­mat­ed the extra expens­es to be $1.6 bil­lion over a 15-year period.12

The net effect of this bur­den on coun­ties is a wide­ly dis­parate and some­what arbi­trary use of the death penal­ty. Rich” coun­ties that can afford the high costs of the death penal­ty may seek this pun­ish­ment often, while poor­er coun­ties may nev­er seek it at all, set­tling for life sen­tences instead. In some areas, this geo­graph­i­cal dis­par­i­ty can have racial effects, as well, depend­ing on the geo­graph­i­cal loca­tion of racial minori­ties with­in the state.

Even coun­ties that do pur­sue cap­i­tal cas­es have found that they have had to cut back on oth­er ser­vices such as libraries, ambu­lances, or even patrol cars for the police. Some coun­ties have approached the brink of bank­rupt­cy because of one death penal­ty case that has to be done over a sec­ond or third time.13

Many of the costs of the death penal­ty are inescapable and are like­ly to increase in the near future, as the demands for a more reli­able and fair­er sys­tem are heard. The major­i­ty of the costs occur at the tri­al lev­el, and can­not eas­i­ly be stream­lined or reduced. There was, how­ev­er, one sig­nif­i­cant rec­om­men­da­tion from the recent report of the Illinois Commission on Capital Punishment which will not cost more mon­ey. Instead, it could rad­i­cal­ly reduce the cost of the death penal­ty. The great­est waste and inef­fi­cien­cy of the death penal­ty occurs when cas­es are not done cor­rect­ly dur­ing the main event” — the tri­al. And states and coun­ties that tend to use the death penal­ty dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly more often than oth­er places, tend to have the most errors — and hence the most added costs.

The Illinois Commission rec­om­mend­ed that Illinois reduce the num­ber of qual­i­fy­ing crimes from the present 20 down to 5.14 This would focus the death penal­ty on the worst of the worst” offend­ers, and in these kinds of cas­es, few­er mis­takes are made. This not only saves the state mon­ey because the death penal­ty is sought less fre­quent­ly — it also elim­i­nates from the sys­tem the bor­der­line cas­es which are most like­ly to be over­turned. With pres­sure off the courts, the pros­e­cu­tion, and the defense com­mu­ni­ty because of a small­er case­load, cas­es can be com­plet­ed with the utmost care, and not result in over­turned con­vic­tions and sen­tences. I think this alter­na­tive deserves serious consideration.

Thank you for this oppor­tu­ni­ty. I would be hap­py to answer any ques­tions the Committee may have.


ENDNOTES

1. Report of the Governor’s Commission on Capital Punishment (Illinois, released April 15, 2002).
2. See Capital Punishment 2000,” Bureau of Justice Statistics (Dec. 2001), at p.15.
3. James S. Liebman, A Broken System: Error Rates in Capital Cases,” (Columbia Univ. June, 2000) (Executive Summary).
4. P. Cook, The Costs of Processing Murder Cases in North Carolina,” Duke University (May 1993), at p.98.
5. P. Cook, The Costs of Processing Murder Cases in North Carolina,” Duke University (May 1993).
6. D. Von Drehle, Bottom Line: Life in Prison One-sixth as Expensive,” The Miami Herald, July 10, 1988, at 12A.
7. S. V. Date, The High Price of Killing Killers,” Palm Beach Post, Jan. 4, 2000, at 1A.
8. C. Hoppe, Executions Cost Texas Millions,” Dallas Morning News, March 8, 1992, at 1A.
9. S. Maganini, Closing Death Row Would Save State $90 Million a Year,” Sacramento Bee, March 28, 1988, at 1.
10. See, Federal Death Penalty Cases: Recommendations Concerning the Cost and Quality of Defense Representation,” Judicial Conference of the United States (May 1998).
11. R. Gold, Counties Struggle with High Cost of Prosecuting Death-Penalty Cases,” Wall St. Journal, Jan. 9, 2002.
12. K. Baicker, The Budgetary Repercussions of Capital Convictions,” National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 8382, July 2001.
13. See gen­er­al­ly, R. Dieter, Millions Misspent: What Politicians Don’t Say About the High Costs of the Death Penalty,” (revised edit., 1994) (avail­able from the Death Penalty Information Center).
14. Report of the Governor’s Commission on Capital Punishment (Illinois, released April 15, 2002), Preamble.