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STUDIES: Death Sentences in California Show Arbitrariness of the System

By Death Penalty Information Center

Posted on Apr 06, 2010 | Updated on Sep 25, 2024

A new report released by the ACLU of Northern California reveals that only three coun­ties – Los Angeles, Orange, and Riverside – account­ed for 83% of the state’s death sen­tences in 2009. Los Angeles County, with 13 death sen­tences, was the lead­ing death penal­ty coun­ty in the entire coun­try last year. According to the report, California, with the largest death row in the coun­try, spends $137 mil­lion annu­al­ly on the death penal­ty, while the state is cut­ting back on many vital ser­vices. The report also indi­cat­ed an increase in the Latino pop­u­la­tion of California’s death row in recent years; 50% of the death sen­tences in 2007 were for Latinos even though they com­prised only 36% of the state’s population.

The exec­u­tive sum­ma­ry of the report con­clud­ed, A shift to per­ma­nent impris­on­ment would mean sig­nif­i­cant sav­ings in a time of fis­cal cri­sis, would elim­i­nate the risk of exe­cut­ing the inno­cent, and would lead to more con­sis­tent poli­cies across all California coun­ties. California is on track to spend $1 bil­lion on the death penal­ty in the next five years, though even more funds are required to pro­tect the inno­cent from wrong­ful con­vic­tion and to ensure time­ly review of lengthy death penal­ty cas­es. For all the mon­ey ded­i­cat­ed to the death penal­ty in California, only 1 out of 100 peo­ple sen­tenced to death has actu­al­ly been exe­cut­ed dur­ing the last thir­ty years.” Click here for the full report.

(N. Minsker et al., Death in Decline 09,” ACLU of Northern California, March 29, 2010). See also Arbitrariness and Costs. Click here for more Studies. Click on thumb­nail image below to enlarge a page from the report.

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