被告种族和受害人种族对加利福尼亚州死刑指控和判决的影响

IF 1.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Journal of Empirical Legal Studies Pub Date : 2024-06-16 DOI:10.1111/jels.12390
Catherine M. Grosso, Jeffrey Fagan, Michael Laurence
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2020 年《加利福尼亚种族正义法案》承认种族和民族歧视是死刑案件中救济的依据,明确允许引入几类统计证据。这项关于种族和民族对适用死刑的影响的全州性研究为这一证据做出了贡献。我们借鉴了 1978 年至 2002 年间加利福尼亚州法院对 27,000 多起谋杀和过失杀人罪的定罪数据。通过使用多种方法,我们发现在指控和量刑决定方面存在显著的种族和民族差异。在控制了被告的罪责和特定的法定加重情节后,我们发现黑人和拉丁裔被告以及所有因杀害至少一名白人受害者而被定罪的被告被判处死刑的可能性大大增加。我们进一步研究了种族和民族在刑事司法系统各环节决策中的作用。我们发现,检察官更有可能对杀害白人受害者的被告判处死刑,而陪审团也更有可能对这些被告判处死刑。被告种族和受害者种族的影响程度远远高于之前在其他州进行的研究和单一司法管辖区的研究。研究结果表明,在起诉和量刑方面,白人受害者案件的种族差异模式根深蒂固;在加利福尼亚州法院,谁被起诉和判处死刑也存在种族差异模式,这是加利福尼亚州关于死亡资格的宽泛法定定义的自然结果,该定义允许在起诉和量刑决定方面几乎无限制的自由裁量权。这种种族偏好模式说明了加利福尼亚州 50 多年前未能遵循最高法院在 "富尔曼诉佐治亚州 "一案中关于缩小死刑适用范围的指示而付出的社会代价。
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The influence of the race of defendant and the race of victim on capital charging and sentencing in California

The California Racial Justice Act of 2020 recognized racial and ethnic discrimination as a basis for relief in capital cases, expressly permitting several types of statistical evidence to be introduced. This statewide study of the influence of race and ethnicity on the application of capital punishment contributes to this evidence. We draw on data from over 27,000 murder and manslaughter convictions in California state courts between 1978 and 2002. Using multiple methods, we found significant racial and ethnic disparities in charging and sentencing decisions. Controlling for defendant culpability and specific statutory aggravators, we show that Black and Latinx defendants and all defendants convicted of killing at least one white victim are substantially more likely to be sentenced to death. We further examined the role that race and ethnicity have in decision-making at various points in the criminal justice system. We found that prosecutors were significantly more likely to seek death against defendants who kill white victims, and that juries were significantly more likely to sentence those defendants to death. The magnitude of the race of the defendant and race of the victim effects is substantially higher than in prior studies in other states and in single-jurisdiction research. The results show an entrenched pattern of racial disparities in charging and sentencing that privileges white victim cases, as well as patterns of racial disparities in who is charged and sentenced to death in California courts that are the natural result of California's capacious statutory definition of death eligibility, which permits virtually unlimited discretion for charging and sentencing decisions. This pattern of racial preferences illustrates the social costs of California's failure to follow the Supreme Court's directive in Furman v Georgia to narrow the application of capital punishment over 50 years ago.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
11.80%
发文量
34
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