Abstract

We demonstrate strong self-referential effects in county-level data concerning use of the death penalty. We first show event-dependency using a repeated-event model. Higher numbers of previous events reduce the expected time delay before the next event. Second, we use a cross-sectional time-series approach to model the number of death sentences imposed in a given county in a given year. This model shows that the cumulative number of death sentences previously imposed in the same county is a strong predictor of the number imposed in a given year. Results raise troubling substantive implications: The number of death sentences in a given county in a given year is better predicted by that county's previous experience in imposing death than by the number of homicides. This explains the previously observed fact that a large share of death sentences come from a small number of counties and documents the self-referential aspects of use the death penalty. A death sentencing system based on racial dynamics and then amplified by self-referential dynamics is inconsistent with equal protection of the law, but this describes the United States system well.

Highlights

  • Imagine a death penalty that is imposed on killers in different areas of the country, or even across localities within individual states, in a manner that is substantially random but, to the extent that any systematic patterns are apparent, those are related to ugly racial dynamics, including the legacy of racial violence in decades past

  • We focus on the question of geographical concentration of the death penalty in just a handful of localities, and we seek to answer the question: Why these counties but not others? The answers reveal racial dynamics combined with caprice, exactly what the Justices were concerned about in

  • In 1972, US Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart and others voting to invalidate all existing death penalty laws worried that the system was capricious and arbitrary, with those selected for the death penalty an unhappy handful randomly selected, like being struck by lightning, out of all the eligible cases

Read more

Summary

RESEARCH ARTICLE

Learning to kill: Why a small handful of counties generates the bulk of US death sentences.

Introduction
Orange FL
Imposing a death sentence
Two distinct tests
Num events
Year FE
Percent Attributable to Previous Cases
Conclusion
Findings
Author Contributions
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call