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Study Finds Staggering Race-of-Victim Disparities in Georgia Executions and that the Death-Penalty Appeals Process Makes Them Worse

By Death Penalty Information Center

Posted on Sep 18, 2019 | Updated on Sep 25, 2024

Defendants con­vict­ed of killing white vic­tims in Georgia are 17 times more like­ly to be exe­cut­ed than those con­vict­ed of mur­der­ing black vic­tims, a new study by researchers at the University of Denver has found, and the prob­lem of dis­crim­i­na­tion is wors­ened by the appeal process.

The study by Sociology and Criminology Professor Scott Phillips (pic­tured, left) and Law Professor Justin Marceau (pic­tured, below), to be pub­lished in an upcom­ing issue of the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, found that 2.26% (22/​972) of the [Georgia] defen­dants who killed a white vic­tim were ulti­mate­ly exe­cut­ed, com­pared to just .13% (2/​1503) of the defen­dants who killed a black vic­tim. Thus, the over­all exe­cu­tion rate is a stag­ger­ing 17 times greater (2.26/.13) for defen­dants who killed a white vic­tim.” The issue, they say, is not so much that [America’s] death penal­ty has a race prob­lem as it is that the race prob­lems of America man­i­fest them­selves through the imple­men­ta­tion of the death penal­ty.” Racial dis­par­i­ty, they say, is a recur­ring and defin­ing fea­ture of each stage of our cap­i­tal punishment system.”

The new study builds on data col­lect­ed by Professor David Baldus in his land­mark 1980s analy­sis of racial dis­par­i­ties in death sen­tenc­ing in Georgia. In that study, Baldus found that the odds that a defen­dant would be sen­tenced to death for mur­der in Georgia were 4.3 times greater if at least one vic­tim was white than if all vic­tims were black. Phillips and Marceau set out to deter­mine whether those dis­par­i­ties con­tin­ued through to the ulti­mate res­o­lu­tion of the cas­es. Reviewing exe­cu­tion data over the more than three decades since Baldus con­duct­ed his study, they found that Baldus had actu­al­ly under­stat­ed the race prob­lems inher­ent to the oper­a­tion of mod­ern death penal­ty jurispru­dence” and that the appel­late review process exacerbate[ed] rather than remediat[ed] the prob­lems of arbitrariness.”

Phillips and Marceau also say that their new study demon­strates that the race-based arbi­trari­ness of the death penal­ty is far worse than pre­vi­ous­ly under­stood” and is mag­ni­fied by the appel­late and clemen­cy process­es.” This, they believe, fun­da­men­tal­ly under­mines the Supreme Court’s assump­tion when it upheld the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty in Gregg v. Georgia in 1976 that appel­late courts would serve as an anti­dote to the arbi­trari­ness” that led the Supreme Court to strike down exist­ing death-penal­ty statutes in Furman v. Georgia in 1972. The new data, they argue, show that this trust in appel­late review as a check on dis­crim­i­na­tion is bad­ly mis­placed. Appellate judges appear unable or unwill­ing to reign in the racial dis­par­i­ties iden­ti­fied at the sentencing phase.”

Their study, Phillips and Marceau sug­gest, shows that exe­cu­tions under exist­ing death-penal­ty schemes remain just as ran­dom as they were when Justice Potter Stewart wrote in Furman that the death penal­ty was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly cru­el and unusu­al in the same way that being struck by light­ning is cru­el and unusu­al.” Of the near­ly 2,500 mur­der cas­es stud­ied by Baldus, few­er than 1% result­ed in exe­cu­tions. Our research,” the authors write, shows that both rar­i­ty and race are oper­at­ing in tan­dem such that the death penal­ty is racial­ly dis­parate and simul­ta­ne­ous­ly so rare as to be vir­tu­al­ly ran­dom – a sys­tem­at­ic lot­tery.” Paraphrasing Justice Harry Blackmun’s state­ment that appel­late review could not cure the defects in cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment and he would no longer tin­ker with the machin­ery of death,” the researchers con­clude that we should no longer con­tin­ue to cod­dle the Court’s delu­sion that the desired lev­el of fair­ness has been achieved,’ [because] the steady stream of data con­firms that the death penal­ty exper­i­ment has failed.’”

Citation Guide
Sources

Scott Phillips and Justin F. Marceau, Whom the State Kills, August 22, 2019, in Harvard Civil Rights – Civil Liberties Law Review, Volume 55.2 (forth­com­ing).