Under 30 US executions for fifth-straight year, report says

Even as the Justice Department moves to resume capital punishment, nationwide use of the death penalty continues to contract, a new report finds.

Lethal injection chambers, such as the one pictured above at the State Penitentiary in Lincoln, Nebraska on July 7, 2010, are increasingly out of use. A new 2019 report finds a continuing decline in capital punishment in the United States.

Nate Jenkins/AP

December 17, 2019

Fewer than 30 people were executed in the United States and under 50 new death sentences were imposed for the fifth straight year, part of a continuing decline in capital punishment that saw only a few states carry out executions, a new report issued Tuesday said.

But even as death row populations were dropping in most of the 29 states that still have the death penalty, the Trump administration tried to restart executions on the federal level and a more conservative Supreme Court appeared less willing to grant death-row inmates last-minute reprieves.

“The death penalty is disappearing from whole regions of the country and eroding in others, but the death penalty is persisting among outlier jurisdictions,” said Robert Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, which produced the look at the death penalty in 2019.

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Twenty of the 22 executions in 2019 took place in five Southern states, led by Texas with 9, the center said. The others are Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Tennessee. Missouri and South Dakota each executed one inmate.

Elsewhere in the country, New Hampshire became the 21st state to abolish the death penalty, while California Gov. Gavin Newsom imposed a formal moratorium on executions in a state with the largest death row population, although the last execution in California took place nearly 14 years ago.

Also for the fifth straight year, no state west of Texas carried out an execution. There are now 32 states that either have no death penalty or have not executed anyone in more than a decade.

But at the federal level, where the last execution took place in 2003, Attorney General William Barr announced in July that federal executions would resume beginning in December. President Donald Trump has long been a proponent of the death penalty.

"The Justice Department upholds the rule of law – and we owe it to the victims and their families to carry forward the sentence imposed by our justice system," Mr. Barr said at the time.

A federal judge put a hold on the scheduled executions, and the Supreme Court turned away the administration's plea to begin conducting lethal injection executions at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana.

Mr. Barr's push for new executions showed that the administration “is going to be out of step with the American public and what is happening in most of the states around the country," Mr. Dunham said. The Death Penalty Information Center takes no position on capital punishment, but is critical of the manner in which it has been administered.

The justices would not allow federal executions in 2019, but the court otherwise signaled its impatience with last-minute efforts to keep inmates from being put to death.

“Last-minute stays should be the extreme exception, not the norm, and 'the last-minute nature of an application' that 'could have been brought' earlier, or 'an applicant’s attempt at manipulation,' 'may be grounds for denial of a stay,'” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in clearing the way for Missouri to execute an inmate with an unusual medical condition. The court's five conservative justices were in the majority, its four liberals, in dissent.

While Texas continues to be the leader in carrying out executions, the number of new death sentences there has dropped markedly in recent years, with just four for the year. Florida and Ohio each had six inmates newly sentenced to death, among the 33 death sentences recorded so far this year. Several capital sentencing proceedings are ongoing and could change the final number, the report said.

Overall, death sentences are down more than 80% from the 1990s, Mr. Dunham said. Fewer jurisdictions are seeking capital punishment and juries are more willing to sentence defendants to life terms with no chance of parole, he said.

This story was reported by The Associated Press.