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DEATH PENALTY: Blacks with Stereotypical Features Executed Most Often By Fritzroy A. Sterling NEW YORK, Jul 19 (IPS) - Juries in the U.S. tend to hand down the death
penalty twice as often to black defendants with stereotypically black
features like darker skin, bigger noses and fuller lips, than to those
perceived to have less stereotypically black features, according to the
findings of a new study.
The study, published in the May 2006 issue of Psychological Science, the
journal of the Association for Psychological Science, noted that previous
research already has proven that black defendants in capital cases receive
the death sentence more frequently than white defendants. The death penalty
is, statistically speaking, unlikely when both the defendant and victim are
black.
When the victim is white, however, the matter of race as an influential
factor in "death-eligible cases" is emphatically evident, according to the
study. A team of educators headed by Stanford University Psychologist
Jennifer L. Eberhardt conducted the study, titled "Looking Death worthy."
"Race and the death penalty is a complicated topic," communications
director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (NCADP),
David Elliot, told IPS. "In Maryland alone, 60 percent of all homicide
victims are black, yet there is only one person currently on death row for
the killing of a black person."
The victims of the five defendants executed in that state between 1976,
the year the death penalty was reinstated, and April 2006, were all white.
Eberhardt and her team conducted the study by presenting black and white
head shots, in slide show format, of black capital defendants in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania between 1979 and 1999. "Naïve" participants
judged how stereotypical each of the defendants looked in the pictures by
noting facial features such as lips, nose and skin tones. Each feature was
rated on a scale of one (not at all stereotypical) to 11 (extremely
stereotypical).
Fifty-seven percent of the defendants considered by the participants as
having extremely stereotypical had already received a death sentence by
juries. Only 24.4 percent of defendants considered not at all stereotypical
had received the death sentence.
The fact that the issue of race continues be of great significance in the
outcomes of capital and other criminal cases does not come as a surprise,
according to death penalty opponents.
"Sadly, this is not a new finding," Christina Swarns, director of the
NAACP Legal Defence and Education Fund Criminal Justice Project, told IPS.
The findings will do little to assuage the concerns of death row inmates
who believe they have been sentenced unfairly because of a key precedent set
in the 1987 U.S. Supreme Court decision in McCleskey v. Kemp.
In that case, the high court rejected the arguments of Warren McCleskey,
a black man convicted of killing a white Georgia police officer, even though
his defence presented statistical data which proved that blacks convicted of
killing whites in the state of Georgia were four times more likely to be
sentenced to death than those who were convicted of killing non-whites.
"McCleskey v. Kemp was one of the most rigourous examinations of the
effects of race on capital sentencing, and the defence's arguments were
similar to findings in this study," Swarns added.
In fact, the majority opinion in McCleskey stated that "apparent
disparities in sentencing are an inevitable part of our criminal justice
system." Moreover, the Court also argued that rather than relying on broad
statistical data to illustrate patterns of discrimination in the criminal
justice system, black capital defendants must provide "exceptionally clear
proof" that the people involved in their specific cases had discriminated
against them in seeking the death penalty.
The decision delivered a debilitating blow to death row inmates seeking
to overturn their fatal sentences on the grounds that the sentences were
racially motivated.
McClesky v. Kemp has since been used as the precedent to overturn appeals
from death row inmates in state Supreme Courts and Courts of Criminal
Appeals in Illinois, Oklahoma, Missouri and South Carolina, according to a
2003 Amnesty International report on the continued significance of race in
capital cases.
The findings of Eberhardt's research underscore how deeply rooted the
negative perceptions of stereotypes and black physical traits are in the
psyche of many jurors. Further, they illustrate how those perceptions affect
the outcomes of capital cases.
According to the study, "in actual sentencing decisions, jurors may treat
these traits as powerful clues to death worthiness."
Defendants with stereotypically black features receive harsher sentences
in other criminal cases, too. The study found that blacks with stereotypical
features spend up to eight months longer in prison for felonies.
"In modern history, the state of Texas," according to NCADP's Elliot,
"has only executed one or two white defendants for the killing of a black
person."
Between 1976 and April 2006, the state of Texas executed 78 black
defendants for the killing of a white victim, according to the spring 2006
quarterly report by the NAACP Legal and Educational Defence Fund.
Texas has executed only two white defendants for the killing of victims
of mixed race between 1976 and 2006, according to that same report. Those
statistics expose blatant flaws in the criminal justice system, according to
some critics.
"It sends a powerful message in the criminal justice system that the
lives of whites are more valuable than those of blacks," Elliot said.
Eberhardt's report also notes that people, not just whites alone,
"associate black physical traits with criminality."
Still, many death penalty opponents are optimistic that through continued
advocacy, policy change and legislative reform, the "apparent disparities"
that the US Supreme Court acknowledged in 1987 as an "inevitable part" of
the criminal justice system can be eliminated.
"There's always hope," said Swarns. "The NAACP Legal Defence Fund is
always looking at ways to successfully attack and remedy those disparities."
She points to Kentucky's Racial Justice Act as a model that should be
considered by federal and state legislatures.
That act allows capital defendants to use statistical data as evidence to
prove that racial discrimination influenced the outcomes of their individual
capital sentences. It was signed into law in Kentucky in 1998, 11 years
after the McCleskey decision.
Supporters of a nation-wide Racial Justice Act argue that some current
death row inmates who believe their death sentence were racially motivated
will be able to cite, for example, the statistical findings of Eberhardt
study to prove that capital defendants with more stereotypically black
features receive the death penalty more frequently than other capital
defendants.
"We need a national racial justice act," said Elliot. "The act will make
it easier to tie individual cases into the broader context of racial
discrimination." (END/2006)
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