Louisiana’s death penal­ty is dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly imposed in cas­es involv­ing white female vic­tims, espe­cial­ly if the defen­dant in the case is a Black man, a new study by three lead­ing death-penal­ty researchers has con­firmed. Louisiana pros­e­cu­tors were more than five times as like­ly to seek the death penal­ty, and juries more than five times as like­ly to impose it, in cas­es involv­ing a Black male offend­er and a white female vic­tim than in crimes in which both the alleged offend­er and the vic­tim were Black.

The Louisiana death penal­ty sys­tem is heav­i­ly weight­ed by a ten­den­cy to seek the harsh­est penal­ties in those cas­es with white female vic­tims,” the study found. Our pow­er­ful and con­sis­tent find­ings of racial and gen­der-based dis­par­i­ties hold in a mul­ti­vari­ate analy­sis and are incon­sis­tent with the equal pro­tec­tion of the law or any com­mon under­stand­ing of equal­i­ty or justice.” 

The study, Race and Gender Disparities in Capitally-Charged Louisiana Homicide Cases, 1976 – 2014, pub­lished in the Southern University Law Review, was con­duct­ed by Northeastern University researcher Tim Lyman, University of North Carolina polit­i­cal sci­en­tist Frank R. Baumgartner, and Northeastern University crim­i­nol­o­gist Glenn L. Pierce. Their pre­vi­ous research on Louisiana’s appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty showed sig­nif­i­cant dis­par­i­ties in the sen­tenc­ing out­comes of defen­dants with white vic­tims as com­pared to those with Black vic­tims. In this new study, the researchers reviewed more than 6,000 homi­cides, of which 1,822 were cap­i­tal­ly charged. The authors sought to deter­mine if the racial dis­par­i­ties uncov­ered in their pre­vi­ous research could be explained by legal­ly rel­e­vant cir­cum­stances. Comparing cap­i­tal­ly charged homi­cides to those that were not cap­i­tal­ly charged, they exam­ined legal­ly rel­e­vant fac­tors (num­ber of vic­tims, age of vic­tims, and oth­er mea­sures of sever­i­ty) and those that were legal­ly irrel­e­vant (race, gen­der, loca­tion) in cas­es in which cap­i­tal charges were dropped or reduced, and in those that pro­ceed­ed as capital.

The vast major­i­ty of cas­es (79%) that were ini­tial­ly cap­i­tal­ly charged had charges reduced before the end of the pros­e­cu­tion and only 107 of the cas­es in the study even­tu­al­ly result­ed in death sen­tences. The researchers found as the cas­es move through the suc­ces­sive fil­ters of the cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tion process, the racial char­ac­ter­is­tics change dra­mat­i­cal­ly. Cases with white vic­tims, are much more like­ly to have harsh­er out­comes, par­tic­u­lar­ly Black-on-White crimes. Black-on-Black crimes, by con­trast, rep­re­sent a small­er share at each stage of the process.” (Click to enlarge image above.) They write that hav­ing a white vic­tim dou­bled the prob­a­bil­i­ty of a death sen­tence for a white sus­pect” but Black defen­dants charged with killing white vic­tims were 8.6 times more like­ly to be sen­tenced to death than those sus­pect­ed of killing blacks.”

The researchers found that sen­tenc­ing dis­par­i­ties were even more pro­nounced when both race and gen­der were con­sid­ered. After com­par­ing oth­er­wise sim­i­lar homi­cide cas­es with Black sus­pects and vic­tims to cas­es with Black male sus­pects and white female vic­tims, they found that Black male sus­pects with white female vic­tims are almost five times more like­ly to face a final charge of first-degree mur­der, and there­fore be eli­gi­ble for the death penal­ty in Louisiana. Homicides with a Black sus­pect and vic­tim have about a 10% chance of pro­ceed­ing to final cap­i­tal charges.” In sim­i­lar­ly sit­u­at­ed cas­es, this prob­a­bil­i­ty increas­es to approx­i­mate­ly 40%” in cas­es with Black male sus­pects and white female vic­tims. These find­ings, they write, show that despite being legal­ly irrel­e­vant, a victim’s race and gen­der are high­ly impor­tant pre­dic­tors” of sentencing outcomes.

The study’s find­ings build upon past research that Lyman, Baumgartner, and Pierce con­duct­ed on Louisiana’s death penal­ty sys­tem. Pierce and col­leagues pre­vi­ous­ly exam­ined the sig­nif­i­cance of a victim’s race on sen­tenc­ing out­comes in a 2011 study titled Death Sentencing in East Baton Rouge Parish, 19902008. In that study, Pierce found that with all oth­er vari­ables held con­stant, the odds of receiv­ing a death sen­tence in a black vic­tim case are on aver­age 97.3% low­er than are the odds of a death sen­tence in a white vic­tim case.” Pierce fol­lowed this research with a 2014 study on racial dis­par­i­ties at ear­li­er stages of the arrest and sen­tenc­ing process in Louisiana, titled Race and the Construction of Evidence in Homicide Cases. Those find­ings showed that pros­e­cu­tors expend greater inves­tiga­tive effort” and com­pile more exten­sive case files in homi­cide cas­es with white vic­tims com­pared to those with Black victims.

Baumgartner and Lyman also con­duct­ed a study on death sen­tenc­ing in Louisiana in 2015 and found data to sug­gest that the death penal­ty may be focused on cas­es with white vic­tims, par­tic­u­lar­ly white female vic­tims.” The researchers also reviewed death sen­tences through the appel­late process in anoth­er 2015 study and found that cas­es involv­ing a white vic­tim were less like­ly to be reversed on appeal.” 

Of the 28 pris­on­ers put to death in Louisiana between 1972 and 2020, nine were Black defen­dants with white vic­tims. Twenty of those 28 were charged with killing at least one female vic­tim. None of the white pris­on­ers exe­cut­ed were sen­tenced for any crime involv­ing a Black vic­tim. The 2021 study shows that race and gen­der of the vic­tims have a strong effect” on deter­min­ing which defen­dants ulti­mate­ly receive the death penalty. 

The Louisiana death penal­ty sys­tem tar­gets crimes with white female vic­tims for the harsh­est pun­ish­ment and treats those with black male vic­tims the light­est,” the researchers con­clude, demon­strat­ing the con­tin­ued and per­va­sive influ­ence of race in the Louisiana death penal­ty sys­tem.” If Louisiana can­not admin­is­ter cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in a man­ner that com­ports with equal pro­tec­tion of the law and com­mon con­cep­tions of jus­tice, they write, it should aban­don the death penal­ty as a sentencing option. 

Citation Guide
Sources

Tim Lyman, Frank R. Baumgartner, and Glenn L. Pierce, Race and Gender Disparities in Capitally-Charged Louisiana Homicide Cases, 1976 – 2014, Southern University Law Review, 2021.