Florida exe­cu­tions are plagued by stark racial, gen­der, and geo­graph­ic dis­par­i­ties, accord­ing to a new University of North Carolina study, with exe­cu­tions 6.5 times more like­ly for mur­ders of white female vic­tims than for mur­ders of black males. (See graph, left. Click to enlarge.). UNC Chapel Hill Professor Frank Baumgartner exam­ined data from the 89 exe­cu­tions con­duct­ed in Florida between 1976 — when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Florida’s use of the death penal­ty — and 2014. Baumgartner found that exe­cu­tions occurred dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly in cas­es involv­ing white vic­tims and vic­tims who were female. While 56% of all Florida homi­cide vic­tims dur­ing that peri­od were white, 72% of all exe­cu­tions involved white vic­tims. Similarly, 26% of all mur­der vic­tims were female, but 43% of exe­cu­tions involved female vic­tims. 71% of the black defen­dants exe­cut­ed in Florida had been con­vict­ed of mur­der­ing white vic­tims. On the oth­er hand, no white per­son had been exe­cut­ed in Florida for killing a black vic­tim. Baumgartner also found that the state’s use of the death penal­ty was geo­graph­i­cal­ly con­cen­trat­ed, with just 6 of Florida’s 67 coun­ties account­ing for more than half of all exe­cu­tions. More than half of Florida’s coun­ties (36) have not pro­duced any exe­cu­tions, and homi­cide rates were 31% low­er in those coun­ties. The study con­cludes that fac­tors such as the vic­tims’ race and gen­der, as well as the coun­ty in which the offend­er was con­vict­ed, inap­pro­pri­ate­ly influ­ence who is exe­cut­ed in Florida.…These dis­par­i­ties are not mea­sured by a few per­cent­age points of dif­fer­ence. Rather, they dif­fer by orders of mag­ni­tude, clear­ly demon­strat­ing that vast inequities char­ac­ter­ize the imple­men­ta­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Florida.”

(F. Baumgartner, The Impact of Race, Gender, and Geography on Florida Executions,” University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, January 14, 2016.) See Arbitrariness and Race.

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