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STUDY: In Oklahoma, Race and Gender of Victim Significantly Affect Death Penalty

By Death Penalty Information Center

Posted on Oct 30, 2017 | Updated on Sep 25, 2024

A new study of more than two decades of mur­ders in Oklahoma has found that defen­dants charged with killing a white woman have odds of being sen­tenced to death in the Sooner State that are near­ly ten times greater than if they had been charged with killing a man who is a racial minority.

The study, pub­lished in the Fall 2017 issue of the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law’s Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, exam­ined more than 4,600 Oklahoma homi­cide cas­es over a 23-year peri­od between January 1, 1990, and December 31, 2012 in which a sus­pect had been iden­ti­fied, includ­ing 153 cas­es in which a death sen­tence had been imposed. The researchers—research sci­en­tist Dr. Glenn L. Pierce (pic­tured, left) and pro­fes­sors Michael L. Radelet (pic­tured, right) and Susan Sharp — found large dis­par­i­ties in the odds of a death sen­tence” that they said cor­re­late with the gen­der and the race/​ethnicity of the victim.”

Among oth­er find­ings, the study deter­mined that there was a strong cor­re­la­tion” between the race of the vic­tim and the prob­a­bil­i­ty that the death penal­ty would be imposed, with cas­es involv­ing white vic­tims sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to end with a death sen­tence than cas­es with non­white vic­tims.” Among all mur­ders, cas­es with white vic­tims were the most like­ly to result in death sen­tences (3.92% of cas­es), fol­lowed by killings of Latino vic­tims (2.67%), black vic­tims (1.87%), and Native-American vic­tims (1.26%). Overall, white-vic­tim cas­es were more than twice as like­ly as cas­es involv­ing black vic­tims or non-white vic­tims as a whole to end in a death ver­dict and more than three times as like­ly to result in a death sen­tence as cas­es with Native-American victims. 

The study also found sig­nif­i­cant vic­tim-gen­der dis­par­i­ties, with mur­ders involv­ing at least one female vic­tim more like­ly to result in a death sen­tence than other cases. 

The com­bi­na­tion of race and gen­der pro­duced even more pro­found dis­par­i­ties in death-sen­tenc­ing rates. The odds that a death sen­tence would be imposed were near­ly 10 times greater (9.59 times) in cas­es with white female vic­tims than in cas­es with minor­i­ty male vic­tims; 8.68 times greater in cas­es with minor­i­ty female vic­tims than in cas­es with minor­i­ty male vic­tims; and more than triple (3.22 times greater) in cas­es with white male vic­tims than in cas­es with minor­i­ty male victims. 

While the study found that the defendant’s race by itself did not cor­re­late with a death sen­tence, the prob­a­bil­i­ty of a death sen­tence for a non­white defen­dant charged with killing a white vic­tim (5.8%) was more than triple the prob­a­bil­i­ty of a death sen­tence for a white defen­dant charged with killing a non-white vic­tim (1.8%).

After spend­ing more than a year study­ing Oklahoma’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment prac­tices — includ­ing a draft ver­sion of the researchers’ study — the bipar­ti­san Oklahoma Death Penalty Review Commission issued a report unan­i­mous­ly rec­om­mend­ing that Oklahoma con­tin­ue its mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions until sig­nif­i­cant reforms are accom­plished.” Two African-American death-row pris­on­ers, Julius Darius Jones and Tremane Wood, have argued based upon that draft of the study, that Oklahoma’s death penal­ty uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly dis­crim­i­nates on the basis of race.

The three researchers have long been involved in death-penal­ty stud­ies. Glenn Pierce is Principal Research Scientist in Northeastern University’s School of Criminology and Criminal Justice and the Co-Director of the University’s Institute for Security and Public Policy. Michael Radelet is Professor of Sociology and Faculty Associate in the Institute of Behavioral Sciences at the University of Colorado-Boulder. Susan Sharp is the David Ross Boyd Professor Emerita of Sociology at the University of Oklahoma.

Citation Guide
Sources

G.L. Pierce, M.L. Radelet, and S. Sharp, Race and Death Sentencing for Oklahoma Homicides Committed Between 1990 and 2012, Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Vol. 107, Issue 4, Fall 2017; P. McGuigan, ANALYSIS – Capitol Review: Budget still murky, death penal­ty con­tro­ver­sy deep­ens, Costello press­es men­tal health pol­i­cy reforms, The City Sentinel, October 302017.