A study recent­ly pub­lished in the jour­nal Criminology meau­red the effects of vic­tim impact evi­dence (VIE) on the like­li­hood of the jury return­ing a death sen­tence. The study was con­duct­ed by Professors Raymond Paternoster and Jerome Deise of the University of Maryland. It involved 135 par­tic­i­pants who watched a video record­ing of an actu­al cap­i­tal tri­al. Seventy-three par­tic­i­pants watched the full video, while the remain­ing 62 par­tic­i­pants watched a ver­sion with the vic­tim impact evi­dence (typ­i­cal­ly, state­ments about the val­ue of the vic­tim and the effect his or her death has had on the rest of the fam­i­ly) edit­ed out. Among those who viewed the vic­tim impact evi­dence, 62.5% said they would impose a death sen­tence on the offend­er, while only 17.5% of those who did not view this evi­dence would have done the same. Among those who did not view vic­tim impact evi­dence, 44.4% said they would impose a sen­tence of life with­out parole and anoth­er 38.1% would have vot­ed for a straight life sen­tence. The study con­clud­ed that, those who viewed vic­tim impact tes­ti­mo­ny per­ceived sig­nif­i­cant­ly more harm and suf­fer­ing inflict­ed on the victim’s fam­i­ly, a greater emo­tion­al loss inflict­ed on the fam­i­ly by the mur­der, and were sig­nif­i­cant­ly less like­ly to think that the victim’s fam­i­ly was cop­ing well with the mur­der… those who viewed VIE and those who actu­al­ly imposed a death sen­tence were sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to think that a sen­tence of death would help the victim’s fam­i­ly find clo­sure or help them recov­er from their loss.”

(R. Paternoster and J. Deise, A Heavy Thumb on the Scale: The Effect of Victim Impact Evidence on Capital Decision Making,” (link to abstract) 21 Criminology 129 (2011)). See Victims and Studies.

Citation Guide