President
Biden and North Carolina Governor Consider Commutations of Death Rows to Remedy
Systemic Problems
Four
States Responsible for 76% of Executions
(Washington, D.C.) This year marked the tenth
consecutive year where fewer than 30 people were executed (25) and fewer than
50 people were sentenced to death (26), while high profile cases of
death-sentenced people attracted significant attention and new, unexpected
supporters. At this writing, widespread coalitions of people with diverse
perspectives are publicly urging President Biden and North Carolina Governor
Cooper to consider commuting the death sentences of prisoners to remedy
longstanding concerns about systemic problems with the application of the death
penalty.
“In 2024, we saw people with credible evidence of
innocence set for execution, followed by extraordinary levels of public
frustration and outrage. Several high-profile cases fueled new concerns about
whether the death penalty can be used fairly and accurately. A new poll also
predicts a steady decline of support in the future, showing for the first time
that a majority of adults aged 18 to 43 now oppose the death penalty,” said
Robin M. Maher, Executive Director of the Death Penalty Information Center
(DPI).
Ten states -- Alabama, Arizona, California, Florida, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada, Ohio, Tennessee, and Texas -- sentenced people to death in 2024. Just four states -- Alabama, California, Florida, and Texas -- account for the majority (20) of new death sentences this year. Florida imposed the highest number of new death sentences, with seven. Texas imposed six new death sentences, while Alabama imposed four, California imposed three, while Arizona, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada, Ohio, and Tennessee each had one new death sentence.
About one third of the 26 new death sentences were
imposed by non-unanimous juries: six in Florida and three in Alabama. In 2023,
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed legislation reducing the number of votes
needed to recommend a death sentence from unanimous to just 8 out of 12 jurors.
Observers accurately predicted that this change would result in an increase in
Florida death sentences. At least ten votes are required for Alabama juries to
recommend a death sentence, while every other state requires unanimity.
Non-unanimous juries have been criticized for silencing minority voices on a
jury, increasing the chances that an innocent person will be convicted, and
undermining public confidence in the death penalty system.
Nine states -- Alabama (6), Florida (1), Georgia
(1), Indiana (1), Missouri (4), Oklahoma (4), South Carolina (2), Texas (5),
and Utah (1) -- carried out executions in 2024. Four states – Alabama,
Missouri, Oklahoma, and Texas – were responsible for 76 percent of executions.
Executions resumed for the first time in decades in
Indiana, South Carolina, and Utah after elected officials announced they had
secured execution drugs or approved new methods. Idaho attempted to resume
executions this year after a twelve-year hiatus but called off the botched
execution of Thomas Creech when the execution team was unable to establish an
IV line after an hour of attempts.
Public support for the death penalty in 2024 remains
at a five-decade low (53%), and polling reveals significant and growing
generational differences, as well as rising disapproval among people ages 43
and younger. Also, a growing number of conservative lawmakers and elected
prosecutors publicly supported prisoners with compelling evidence of innocence,
including Richard Glossip in Oklahoma, Marcellus Williams in Missouri, and
Robert Roberson in Texas.
Three death row prisoners were exonerated in 2024.
DPI’s ongoing research uncovered two additional exonerations from prior years,
bringing the number of U.S. death row exonerations since 1972 to 200. In Texas,
Melissa Lucio, who came within two days of execution in 2022, was declared
“actually innocent” by a trial court in October.
The U.S. Supreme Court turned away almost all
petitions (145 of 148, 98%) from death-sentenced prisoners in 2024, even those
with strong evidence of innocence. This approach reflects the Court’s retreat
from the critical role it has historically played in regulating and limiting
use of the death penalty. The Court’s December 6 certiorari grant
in Rivers v. Lumpkin, a non-capital case, threatens to further restrict
pathways to relief on appeal for death-sentenced prisoners.
The number of new death sentences (26) and
executions (25) in 2024 represented an increase from 2023 when there were 21
new death sentences and 24 executions but represented a dramatic drop from
twenty years ago when there were 130 new death sentences and 59 executions. This
change can be attributed to an increase in non-unanimous death sentences in
Florida, where the law was changed in April of 2023, and Alabama, the only two
states that permit non-unanimous death sentencing. In 2023, non-unanimous
sentences accounted for three new death sentences (one in Florida, two in
Alabama) but this year accounted for nine (six in Florida, three in Alabama).
Executions reflect the views of jurors at the time
of sentencing—increasingly, views that are 20 or 30 years out of date. The
majority of individuals executed in 2024 would likely not receive death
sentences if their cases were tried today. Legislative and legal changes,
increased scrutiny of prosecutorial practices, and shifts in societal attitudes
over recent decades have significantly affected whether defendants receive
death sentences.
Today’s jurors, with their better understanding of
how severe mental illness, developmental disabilities, youth, and profound
trauma affect behavior, are increasingly choosing life sentences over death
sentences. All but one individual executed in 2024 had at least one of the
above-listed vulnerabilities. Six of the 25 people executed were 21 or younger
at the time of the crime for which they were executed.
As has been historically true, prisoners of color
and prisoners convicted of killing white victims were overrepresented among
those executed. Twelve of the 25 prisoners executed this year were people of
color. The vast majority of defendants (80%) were executed for killing at least
one white victim. Fourteen of the defendants sentenced to death this year (54%)
were people of color. Death penalty-related legislation was enacted in at
least six states (California, Delaware, Louisiana, North Carolina, Tennessee,
and Utah) to limit use of the death penalty, alter execution methods or
protocols, modify procedures, and increase secrecy. Death penalty abolition
efforts continue in more than a dozen states, and efforts to reintroduce the
death penalty in eight states failed. Only one effort to expand the death
penalty to non-homicide crimes was successful, in Tennessee.
Read “The Death Penalty in 2024: Year End Report” here: https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/research/analysis/reports/year-end-reports/the-death-penalty-in-2024