A soon-to-be-pub­lished study has found sig­nif­i­cant racial dis­par­i­ties in the U.S. mil­i­tary’s death penal­ty. The study, which will be pub­lished in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, found that minori­ties in the mil­i­tary are twice as like­ly to be sen­tenced to death as whites accused of sim­i­lar crimes. The study exam­ined all 105 poten­tial cap­i­tal cas­es since the mil­i­tary death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed in 1984. Of the 16 death sen­tences hand­ed down in that time, 10 were of minor­i­ty defen­dants. The authors did not attribute the dis­par­i­ties to inten­tion­al bias: There is no sug­ges­tion here that any par­tic­i­pant in the mil­i­tary crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem con­scious­ly and know­ing­ly dis­crim­i­nat­ed on the basis of the race of the accused or the vic­tim,” the authors said. However, there is sub­stan­tial evi­dence that many actors in the American crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem are uncon­scious­ly influ­enced by the race of defen­dants and their vic­tims.” A New York Times edi­to­r­i­al about the study not­ed how rarely death sen­tences are hand­ed down in the mil­i­tary, that there have been no mil­i­tary exe­cu­tions since 1961, and that 8 out of 10 death sen­tences have been over­turned. Six men are cur­rent­ly on the U.S. mil­i­tary’s death row. The edi­to­r­i­al con­clud­ed, The de fac­to mora­to­ri­um has not made the coun­try or the mil­i­tary less secure. The evi­dence of per­sis­tent racial bias is fur­ther evi­dence that it is time for the mil­i­tary sys­tem to abol­ish the death penalty.”

The study’s authors sug­gest­ed that racial bias could be dis­cour­aged by reserv­ing the mil­i­tary death penal­ty for mur­ders in which there is sig­nif­i­cant mil­i­tary inter­est. Such a lim­i­ta­tion of death eli­gi­bil­i­ty under mil­i­tary law would also sim­pli­fy the costs and com­plex­i­ty of the cur­rent sys­tem with­out impair­ing the charg­ing and sen­tenc­ing author­i­ties’ abil­i­ty to pro­tect vital mil­i­tary inter­ests through the use of the death penal­ty.” The study, Racial Discrimination in the Administration of the Death Penalty: The Experience of the United States Armed Forces (1984 – 2005),” was authored by David Baldus (a not­ed death penal­ty researcher who died in June), George Woodworth, Catherine Grosso, and Richard Newell.

(M. Taylor, Study: Racial dis­par­i­ties taint mil­i­tary’s use of death penal­ty,” McClatchy Newspapers, Aug. 28, 2011; The Military and the Death Penalty,” New York Times, Sept. 1, 2011, edi­to­r­i­al). See also: Race and U.S. Military

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