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Capital Punishment in the U.S. Is Still Biased [PSMag.com]

The American justice system executed fewer people in 2015 than it has in nearly 25 years, and it handed out fewer death sentences this year than it has in almost 40, according to new data from the Death Penalty Information Center. Despite these historic lows, however, racial bias persists among those who were executed. We thought this was an apt time to review the numbers.

About equal numbers of blacks and whites are murdered every year in the United States. Yet, in America, the killers of white folks are more likely to receive the death penalty than those who kill blacks, as a "generation of research studies" has shown. In addition, a study published just this year demonstrated that mock jurors are equally likely to convict black and white defendants of murder if the punishment is life without paroleβ€”but they're more likely to convict a black defendant if the punishment is death. As a result, "African Americans may be wrongfully sentenced to death more often and whites could be wrongfully acquitted more often," as Kate Wheeling wrote in July.

In the Death Penalty Information Center's data, out of the 28 prisoners who states executed this year, only six were involved in cases in which black Americans were murdered.



[For more of this story, written by Francie Diep, go to http://www.psmag.com/politics-...penalty-still-biased]

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