According to a new study prin­ci­pal­ly authored by Prof. Frank Baumgartner of the University of North Carolina, the death penal­ty is far more like­ly to be used if the under­ly­ing mur­der vic­tim was white rather than black. The study exam­ined every U.S. exe­cu­tion from 1976 – 2013 and found, The sin­gle most reli­able pre­dic­tor of whether a defen­dant in the United States will be exe­cut­ed is the race of the vic­tim.… Capital pun­ish­ment is very rarely used where the vic­tim is a Black male, despite the fact that this is the cat­e­go­ry most like­ly to be the vic­tim of homicide.” 

Of the 534 white defen­dants exe­cut­ed for the mur­der of a sin­gle vic­tim, only nine involved the mur­der of a black male vic­tim. Although blacks make up about 47% of all mur­der vic­tims, they make up only 17% of vic­tims in cas­es result­ing in an exe­cu­tion. The authors con­clud­ed, In [the death penal­ty’s] mod­ern his­to­ry as in its use in pre­vi­ous eras, racial bias in its appli­ca­tion is con­sis­tent­ly high. In addi­tion to the threat to the equal pro­tec­tion of the law that these num­bers sug­gest, such over­whelm­ing evi­dence of dif­fer­en­tial treat­ment erodes pub­lic sup­port for the judicial system.”

The authors also reviewed oth­er stud­ies on this sub­ject pub­lished since 1972 and found, The vast major­i­ty of these (death sen­tenc­ing) stud­ies found that killers of Whites were more like­ly than killers of Blacks to receive a death sentence.”

Citation Guide
Sources

Frank Baumgartner et al., #BlackLivesDon’tMatter: Race-of-Victim Effects in US Executions, 1976 – 2013, Politics, Groups, and Identities, forthcoming 2015).