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December 16, 2021
DPIC releases year-end report emphasizing "continuing decline of death penalty" in 2021
The Death Penalty Information Center this morning released its annual report here under the heading "The Death Penalty in 2021: Year End Report; Virginia’s Historic Abolition Highlights Continuing Decline of Death Penalty." Here is the starts of the report's introduction, with lots of data and details following thereafter:
The death penalty in 2021 was defined by two competing forces: the continuing long-term erosion of capital punishment across most of the country, and extreme conduct by a dwindling number of outlier jurisdictions to continue to pursue death sentences and executions.
Virginia’s path to abolition of the death penalty was emblematic of capital punishment’s receding reach in the United States. A combination of changing state demographics, eroding public support, high-quality defense representation, and the election of reform prosecutors in many key counties produced a decade with no new death sentences in the Commonwealth. As the state grappled with its history of slavery, Jim Crow, lynchings, and the 70th anniversary of seven wrongful executions, the governor and legislative leaders came to see the end of the death penalty as a crucial step towards racial justice. On March 24, Virginia became the first southern state to repeal capital punishment, and expanded the death-penalty-free zone on the U.S. Atlantic coast from the Canadian border of Maine to the northern border of the Carolinas.
In the West, where an execution-free zone spans the Pacific coast from Alaska to Mexico, the Oregon Supreme Court began removing prisoners from the state’s death row based on a 2019 law that redefined the crimes that constitute capital murder. Nationwide, mounting distrust of the death-penalty system was reflected in public opinion polling that measured support for capital punishment at near half-century lows. With Virginia’s abolition, a majority of states have now abolished the death penalty (23) or have a formal moratorium on its use (3). An additional ten states have not carried out an execution in at least ten years.
2021 saw historic lows in executions and near historic lows in new death sentences. As this report goes to press, eighteen people were sentenced to death, tying 2020’s number for the fewest in the modern era of the death penalty, dating back to the Supreme Court ruling in Furman v. Georgia that struck down all existing U.S. death-penalty statutes in 1972. The eleven executions carried out during the year were the fewest since 1988. The numbers were unquestionably affected by the pandemic but marked the seventh consecutive year of fewer than 50 death sentences and 30 executions. Both measures pointed to a death penalty that was geographically isolated, with just three states — Alabama, Oklahoma, and Texas — accounting for a majority of both death sentences and executions.
December 16, 2021 at 11:51 AM | Permalink
Comments
The death penalty disappeared in Virginia when the Democrats got control of both the House of Delegates and the Governor's chair, a decision the voters reversed the first time they got the chance (that being last month).
And the DPIC, as dishonest and partisan as usual, omits the elephant in the death penalty room: The long erosion in support for the DP has ground to a halt, and capital punishment is approved by a decided majority, considerably more than approve of Joe Biden. https://www.crimeandconsequences.blog/?p=5091
Posted by: Bill Otis | Dec 16, 2021 3:42:35 PM
I don't think that you can use the number of verdicts for anything from the last two years as reliable data. My understanding from prosecutors around the country has been that a lot of courts are only slowly opening up. If you are not having jury trial, you are not getting death sentences.
From a trend standpoint, I would be looking at the number of cases in which the prosecution is seeking the death penalty, and the number of death sentences as a percentage of resolved cases.
Posted by: tmm | Dec 17, 2021 11:51:44 AM