A new study by Professor Frank Baumgartner of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Tim Lyman, a Documentation Specialist in New Orleans, reports stark dis­par­i­ties in Louisiana death sen­tences and exe­cu­tions depend­ing upon the race and gen­der of the homi­cide vic­tim. The study — to be pub­lished in the Loyola University of New Orleans Journal of Public Interest Law — finds that defen­dants accused of killing white vic­tims are near­ly twice as like­ly to be sen­tenced to death and near­ly four times as like­ly to be exe­cut­ed than defen­dants accused of killing black victims. 

The dis­par­i­ties are even greater when both race and gen­der are com­pared. Defendants accused of killing white women are sen­tenced to death at near­ly 12 times the rate of defen­dants accused of killing black men (56.94 vs. 4.88 death sen­tences per 1,000 homi­cides), and exe­cut­ed at a rate that is 48 times high­er (11.52 vs. 0.24 exe­cu­tions per 1,000 homi­cides). The authors find that both the race and gen­der of vic­tims affect sen­tenc­ing out­comes in mur­der cas­es, but that death sen­tenc­ing and exe­cu­tion rates are high­er in cas­es involv­ing white vic­tims, irre­spec­tive or gen­der, and in cas­es involv­ing female vic­tims, irre­spec­tive of race. 

72% of mur­der vic­tims in Louisiana since 1976 have been black, but just 33% of death sen­tence have involved black vic­tims. Cases involv­ing black male vic­tims had the low­est rate of death sen­tences and exe­cu­tions per homi­cide of any class of vic­tim. 12,693 black males have been mur­dered in Louisiana since 1976 (61% of mur­der vic­tims), with only 3 exe­cu­tions (0.02% of these mur­ders; 8% of Louisiana exe­cu­tions). (Click here to enlarge image.)

Citation Guide
Sources

Frank Baumgartner and Tim Lyman, Race-Of-Victim Discrepancies in Homicides and Executions, Louisiana 1976 – 2015, Loyola University of New Orleans Journal of Public Interest Law, Fall 2015.