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Alaska
Justice Forum
19(1), Spring 2002
Issue
contents | Complete
issue in Adobe Acrobat PDF format
| Abstract: In 2000, according to the Bureau of
Justice Statistics, 85 prisoners were executed in 14 states in
the U.S. Another 3593 prisoners were under death sentences nationwide.
This article provides statistics and information about the state
of the death penalty in the U.S. in 2000. |
Capital
Punishment 2000 and 2001
According to figures compiled
by the Bureau of Justice Statistics, 14 states executed 85 prisoners
in 200013 fewer executions in the United States than in
1999. Of those executed 43 were white; 35, black; 6, Hispanic,
and 1, American Indian; 83 were men and 2, women. In 2001, according
to preliminary figures also released by BJS, 66 people were executed63
men and 3 women. Of these individuals, 48 were white; 17, black;
and 1 was American Indian. The federal government executed two
inmates in 2001the first federal executions since 1963.
BJS also reports that at the end
of 2000, 3593 prisoners were under a death sentence in the country
as a whole, with the highest numbers of prisoners on death row
in California (586), Texas (450), Florida (371) and Pennsylvania
(238). Thirty-eight states and the federal government provided
for the death penalty for certain offenses (Table 1). (Currently
both Maryland and Illinois have placed moratoria on use of the
death penalty pending studies of its application.) Of the states
with the penalty, 37 provided for automatic review of all death
sentences, regardless of the defendants wishes, with most
requiring review of both the conviction and the sentence, usually
in the states highest appellate court. The federal government
did not provide for automatic review of death sentences.
From 1977 through 2000, 683
persons were executed in the United States, with the highest
number of executions occurring in Texas239and the
second highest in Virginia81. For the prisoners executed
from 1977 through 2000, the average time between imposition of
sentence and execution was more than 10 years. Between 1973 and
2000, higher courts overturned 681 convictions and 1,102 sentences
in death penalty cases. These two figures amount to 32.4 percent
of death sentences from 1973 to 2000. BJS does not provide details
or figures on the bases for the overturns.
In its annual review of capital
punishment figures for the nation, BJS does not present figures
on the cost of the death penalty process nor does it look at
figures on legal representation of defendants in capital cases.
Other BJS figures, however, provide some idea of the legal representation
picture. Figures on counsel in criminal cases indicate that close
to 56 percent of defendants in homicide cases (which are the
most common capital cases) in 1996 had state-appointed counsel;
close to 40 percent used private counsel; 2.5 percent used a
combination and 2.5 percent of defendants represented themselves.
Of inmates confined in 1997 for homicide convictions in state
and federal prisons, 67 percent were represented by appointed
counsel.
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University of Alaska Anchorage
Last updated 7 Jan
2003 by ayjust@uaa.alaska.edu
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