The death penalty remains a contentious topic. Whether the state has the right to take a personâs life is a question that raises moral, spiritual, political, and economic concerns. For a short period in the early to mid 1970s, the U.S. Supreme Court put a moratorium on executions, ruling that the death penalty statutes of many states were unconstitutional, although it later reinstated the death penalty in 1976.
As a result, many states rewrote their death penalty statutes and the number of executions rose. However, executions began to decline again in the 21st century, as recent death penalty statistics show.
The technology and methods involved in state-run executions have evolved greatly over the years. For the first 150 years of the countryâs existence, prisoners were executed either through hanging or by firing squad. That changed in the 1880âs when the electric chair was invented. Electrocution became the standard method for executions until 1982, when lethal injection was used for the first time.
As of the early 21st century, lethal injections remain the preferred method for execution. Although occasionally other methods are used (including the electric chair as an option in Alabama, Florida, and four other states), the vast majority of executions are performed by lethal injection.
However, many of the drug companies that manufacture the substances used in lethal injections have sued to stop states from using their drugs in this manner. Others simply stopped making those particular drugs. As a result, some states (most notably Nebraska) were left without the means to carry out scheduled executions.
The number and type of executions vary widely from year to year and from state to state. Since the invention of the lethal injection procedure in 1982, there has been an average of 46 people executed per year. Approximately half of the deceased were white people, one third were African-Americans, and the remainder were of other races. The overwhelming majority of executed individuals have been men; less than 1% have been women.
A total of 1491 convicts have been executed in the United States since 1976, with 23 in 2017 and 25 in 2018. The annual number of executions had been in decline since 2009, when there 52, but began to rise after 20 people were executed in 2016. The following death penalty statistics are from the Death Penalty Information Center, the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and other sources.
Most states practice capital punishment, although the trend is moving away from execution as a criminal punishment. As of 2019, 30 states still allow for the death penalty:
Alabama Kentucky Oklahoma Arizona Louisiana Oregon Arkansas Mississippi Pennsylvania California Missouri South Carolina Colorado Montana South Dakota Florida Nebraska Tennessee Georgia Nevada Texas Idaho New Hampshire Utah Indiana North Carolina Virginia Kansas Ohio WyomingAs you can see, the death penalty is still alive and well in a majority of states. Although it only applies in certain cases, it's just a reminder of the power that the government can have when depriving you of your freedoms through the criminal justice process. If you're facing criminal charges, it's in your best interests to contact an experienced criminal defense attorney to ensure that your rights are protected.