2014
DOI: 10.3390/laws3010085
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Is the Modern American Death Penalty a Fatal Lottery? Texas as a Conservative Test

Abstract: In Furman v. Georgia (1972), the Supreme Court was presented with data indicating that 15% to 20% of death-eligible defendants were actually sentenced to death. Based on such a negligible death sentence rate, some Justices concluded that the imposition of death was random and capricious-a fatal lottery. Later, the Court assumed in Gregg v. Georgia (1976) that guided discretion statutes would eliminate the constitutional infirmities identified in Furman: If state legislatures narrowed the pool of death-eligible… Show more

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“…However, recent research suggests that numerical arbitrariness remains, as the death-sentence rate falls below the Furman threshold in Connecticut (4 percent) and Colorado (less than 1 percent). 116 For example, in an extensive study of death sentences imposed per 1,000 homicides only Maryland with a rate of 5 is lower than California with a rate of 8. The median rate is 18.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, recent research suggests that numerical arbitrariness remains, as the death-sentence rate falls below the Furman threshold in Connecticut (4 percent) and Colorado (less than 1 percent). 116 For example, in an extensive study of death sentences imposed per 1,000 homicides only Maryland with a rate of 5 is lower than California with a rate of 8. The median rate is 18.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%