Title: Matthew B. Robinson, PhD
1The Empirical Realities of Capital Punishment
Does it Work?Is it Good Policy?
- Matthew B. Robinson, PhD
- Appalachian State University
2How to EvaluateCapital Punishment(or any policy)
- Goals achieved?
- Benefits outweigh costs?
3Goals of Capital Punishment
- Retribution providing justice for society
(crime victims) by righting the scales of
justice - Incapacitation taking away the freedom of
murderers (by killing them) so they cannot commit
future crimes - Deterrence creating fear through executions to
prevent future crimes
4(No Transcript)
5Three Key Factsof Capital Punishment
- 1) Capital punishment is extremely rare in the
United States
6Rare Nature of Capital Punishment
- 1977-2006 592,580 murder and nonnegligent
manslaughters in the United States (average of
19,752 killings per year) - -- 7,225 death sentences (average of 241 death
sentences per year) - -- 1,099 executions (average of 37 executions per
year)
7Rare Nature of Capital Punishment
- 1.2 of killings from 1977 to 2006 led to death
sentences - 0.185 of killings have led to an execution (so
far) - Question Can we achieve our goals when
executions are this rare?
8Source of data Franklin Zimring (2003). The
Contradictions of American Capital Punishment.
9Death Sentences Becoming Rarer
10Executions Becoming Rarer
Source of data Bureau of Justice Statistics
11Executions Becoming Rarer
Source of chart Death Penalty Information Center
12Even Death Row Has Shrunk!
Source of chart Death Penalty Information Center
13Three Key Factsof Capital Punishment
- 2) Even in leading death penalty states, capital
punishment is extremely rare!
14Average Death Sentence Rate is 2.2
Above average death penalty rates by state,
1977-1999 (Rate of Death Sentences By Number of
Murders)
- Nevada -- 0.060
- Oklahoma -- 0.051
- Delaware -- 0.048
- Idaho -- 0.047
- Arizona -- 0.043
- Alabama -- 0.038
- Mississippi -- 0.035
- Florida -- 0.034
- Ohio -- 0.028
- North Carolina -- 0.026
- Pennsylvania -- 0.024
- Missouri -- 0.024
- Nebraska -- 0.023
- Georgia -- 0.022
- Oregon -- 0.022
15Rare Nature of Capital Punishment
- Question How many states have executed at least
ONE inmate per year since 1976??? - Answer NINE
16Rare Nature of Capital Punishment
- Question How many states have executed at least
TEN inmates per year since 1976??? - Answer ONE!
- Texas (12 executions per year)
17Rare Nature of Capital Punishment
- Texas (1976-2002) -- 51,729 murders (average of
1,915 killings per year) - versus only 31 death sentences and
12 executions per year! - Texas sentenced to death only 1.6 and executed
only 0.63 of its murderers
18Three Key Factsof Capital Punishment
- 3) Capital punishment practice is highly
regionalized!
19Regional Nature of Capital Punishment
- Most modern executions in the South
- 1976-2006 --1,099 executions
- 82 in South
- 12 in Midwest
- 6 in West
- 0 in Northeast (4 total)
- Texas alone (37 of total)
- Texas in 2006 26/53 (49)
- Texas in 2007 24/41 (59)
- Texas in 2008 18/37 (49)
- Texas in 2009 (through April 1) 12/20 (60)
20- Executions from 1977-June 2006
- Darker colors more executions
Source of chart Death Penalty Information Center
21Regional Nature of Capital Punishment
Source of data Death Penalty Information Center
22Recall --How to EvaluateCapital Punishment(or
any policy)
- Goals achieved?
- Costs outweigh benefits?
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24Retribution
- Does capital punishment, as actually practiced in
the United States, achieve retribution (i.e.,
provide justice for murder victims, their
families, and society at large)? - Yes 31
- No 36
- Unsure 33
-
- n42
25Retribution
- Too rare capital punishment not used enough to
provide meaningful retribution - Fails to provide closure many families do not
feel better after execution - Delays process takes so long it interferes with
closure (average of 11 years) - Excessive can be achieved with life
imprisonment without parole (LWOP) - Too costly costs more than LWOP, innocent
people can be executed, racially biased
26Incapacitation
- Does capital punishment, as actually
- practiced in the United States, achieve
- incapacitation (i.e., prevent future
- murders by killing murderers who would
- murder again)?
- Yes 64
- No 24
- Unsure 12
-
- n42
27Incapacitation
- Too rare capital punishment not used enough to
provide meaningful incapacitation - Unnecessary most murderers never kill again
anyway - Excessive can be achieved with life
imprisonment without parole (LWOP) - Too costly costs more than LWOP, innocent
people can be executed, racially biased
28Deterrence
- Does capital punishment, as actually practiced in
the United States, achieve deterrence (i.e.,
prevent future murders by causing fear in
would-be murderers so that they do not commit
murder)? - Yes 9
- No 79
- Unsure 12
- n43
29Deterrence
- Too rare capital punishment not used enough to
provide meaningful deterrence - Unknown and private executions not even known
to people and also private so how can they deter? - Excessive can be achieved with life
imprisonment without parole (LWOP) - Brutalization some evidence suggests executions
increase murder - Too costly costs more than LWOP, innocent
people can be executed, racially biased
30Does Capital PunishmentAchieve its Goals?
- NO why?
- Used too infrequently
31And What About the Costs?
- Racial bias
- Social class bias
- Sex/Gender bias
- Innocence
32Racial Bias?
- Is American capital punishment plagued by a
racial bias of any kind? - Yes 84
- No 7
- Unsure 9
-
- n43
33Race
- Race of victim killers of whites far more
likely to be sentenced to death/executed - Black killers of whites especially
- Since 1976 15 whites who killed blacks executed
versus 235 blacks who killed whites!
34Social Class Bias?
- Is American capital punishment plagued by a
social class bias of any kind? - Yes 80
- No 4
- Unsure 16
-
- n45
35Class
- Bias in the law only some forms of killings
even eligible - Quality of defense poor least able to pay for
competent defense - Make-up of death row nearly everyone on death
row is poor
36Sex/Gender Bias?
- Is American capital punishment plagued by a
gender/sex bias of any kind? - Yes 50
- No 12
- Unsure 38
- n42
37Gender
- Chivalry less willing to kill women
- Killers of women more likely to be sentenced to
death, especially killers of white women
38Innocence?
- Is American capital punishment ever used against
the innocent? - Yes 76
- No 2
- Unsure 22
- n42
39Innocence
- Wrongful conviction 130 people freed from death
row - Wrongful executions people executed despite
doubts about guilt - http//deathpenaltyinfo.org/executed-possibly-inno
cent
40Do Benefits of Capital PunishmentOutweigh the
Costs?
- NO why?
- Few benefits overwhelmed by numerous costs
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42Support or Not?
- Do you believe in capital punishment/the death
penalty, or are you opposed to it? - Experts Citizens
- Believe in 9 64
- Opposed 80 30
- Unsure 11 6
- n44 Gallup, 2005
-
43Most supported by Males, Whites Least supported
Females, Blacks, and the most educated
44Most supported by wealthy, Southerners,
Republicans, conservatives Least supported the
poorest, Democrats, and liberals
45Perceived fairness higher for Males,
Whites Perceived unfairness higher for Females,
Blacks
46Perceived fairness higher for Republicans,
conservatives Perceived unfairness higher for
poorest, Democrats, liberals
47Appropriate sentence?
- What is the most appropriate punishment for
someone convicted of first-degree murder? - Experts Citizens
- Death sentence 0 47
- LWOP 37 48
- Other 63 5
-
- n43 Gallup, 2005
48Appropriate sentence?
Source of chart Death Penalty Information Center
49Moratorium?
- Do you personally favor a temporary halt to
executions (moratorium) in the United States
while the practice of American capital punishment
is studied? - Experts Citizens
- Yes 79 58
- No 14 38
- Unsure 7 4
- N 44 NOS, 2007
50Abolition?
- Does capital punishment, as actually practiced in
the United States, have problems that are serious
enough to make it unacceptable as a
government-sanctioned punishment (so that states
should permanently stop executing convicted
murderers)? - Yes 84
- No 14
- Unsure 2
-
- n44
51So Why DoesCapital Punishment Persist?
- History/Culture of Violence
- Politics
- Critical Part of Punishment
- Public Support
- Crime Rates
- Religion
- Government Structure
52What is going to happen?
- New Jersey
- New York
- New Mexico
- North Carolina