Executions decline along
with support
for U.S. death penalty
A five-year decline in death sentences, a 40 percent drop in executions, a shrinking death row population, and waning public support for capital punishment have marked a significant turn around in the use of the death penalty, according to the Death Penalty Information Center’s (DPIC) 2004 Year End Report. DPIC’s numbers are for 2004 and reinforce figures for 2003 that were released in November by the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
| STATES WITH THE DEATH PENALTY | ||
| Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Idaho Indiana Illinois Kansas* Kentucky |
Louisiana Maryland Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico* New York* North Carolina Ohio Oklahoma |
Oregon Pennsylvania South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Virginia Washington Wyoming ALSO - U.S. Gov't - U.S. Military |
| * The New York (6/24/2004) and Kansas (12/17/2004) death penalty statutes were declared unconstitutional in 2004. Abolition of capital punishment passed New Mexico House, goes to Senate (2/28/2005) | ||
| STATES WITHOUT THE DEATH PENALTY | ||
| Alaska Hawaii Iowa Maine Massachusetts |
Michigan Minnesota North Dakota Rhode Island Vermont |
West Virginia Wisconsin ALSO - Dist. of Columbia |
“The events of the past year and the statistical evidence all point in one direction,” said Richard Dieter, DPIC Executive Director. “The public’s confidence in the death penalty has seriously eroded over the past several years. Because of so many failures, the death penalty is rightly on the defensive. Life-without-parole offers the public a better alternative without all the risks and expense.”
The number of people sentenced to death annually has dropped by 50 percent since 1999. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reported 144 death sentences in 2003, the lowest number in three decades, and DPIC projects an even smaller number this year based on figures for the first three quarters of 2004. If the current rate continues, there will be 130 death sentences this year. In addition, the number of individuals on death row declined from 3,504 in 2003 to 3,471 in 2004. Executions also fell by 10 percent, down from 65 in 2003 to 59 in 2004. This represents a 40 percent drop since 1999. Of the executions that did take place, only two states conducted executions outside of the South, which accounted for 85 percent of the executions.
More stats at a glance: Total worldwide executions in 2004: 526 Number of executions by electric chair worldwide 2004: 1 (in U.S.) Total U.S. executions in 2004: 59 Only China (217) and Iran (95) executed more people than the U.S. in 2004. Total U.S. executions since 1976: 950 Total executions since 1976 in Texas (highest in the nation): 339 Total executions since 1976 in Virginia (second highest in the nation): 94 |
Public support for the death penalty continued to erode in 2004. When respondents were given a choice between the death penalty and life-without-parole as the appropriate sentence for first-degree murder, 50 percent of those polled favored the death penalty and 46 percent favored life without a parole. In 1997, the difference between these two choices was 32 percentage points.
Concerns about innocence continue to be a principal reason for the decline in the use of the death penalty. Five people were exonerated from death row in 2004, bringing the total number of exonerated since capital punishment was reinstated to 117. This crisis has led to a series of calls for either significant reform of the death penalty or a complete cessation of executions. Prominent political leaders, Supreme Court Justices, and law enforcement officials in Texas and elsewhere have come to the conclusion that the present system can no longer be tolerated.
The 2004 Year End Report is the 10th of its kind published by DPIC, a non-profit organization serving the media and the public with analysis and information on capital punishment.
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