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Women and The Death Penalty: Special Report

Don't miss the spring issue of MS Magazine with its special report on women and the death penalty by Claudia Driefus. It's available free, on-line.

Since 1976 when the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty, 131 women have been sentenced to death. Ten women have been executed, nine of them within the past five years.

As this is being written, there are 44 women sitting on death rows in some 14 states, less than 2% of the total among the condemned. In the 27 years since the Supreme Court revived capital punishment, ten women have been put to death. As the nation continues to debate the use of executions as a crime prevention strategy, the fate of these women is mostly absent from public discussion. They are a policy afterthought, as invisible in their potential deaths as they were in their lives.

The broad arguments against capital punishment, male and female, are widely known: It is applied unequally to the poor and unequally by race; innocent people have likely been executed; it does nothing to deter crime; it brutalizes all of society by heightening the general ambiance of violence. But when one examines the stories of the women on death rows around the country, all the rest seems doubly true. The females who draw death sentences seem to be the poorest of the poor, the most socially marginal, the least able to protect themselves in court with a well-funded and coherent defense.

And some of the women are doubtlessly innocent. Over 100 people have walked free from death row, victims of wrongful convictions....For a great many of the women, however, the big issue is not so much wrongful conviction, but over-prosecution such things as the upgrading of charges and the ignoring of mitigating circumstances such as self-defense or a history of abuse or even mental illness.

The ACLU is conducting a study, due out later this year, on women on death row and the systemic elements of unfairness in how they got there. Over-prosecution-- that fact of death in so many female capital cases-- is being looked at, and Diann Rust-Tierney, director of their Capital Punishment Project, has indications it's widespread.

In addition to the policy issues involving women on death row, the article contains the personal stories of many of these women. The reporter spent 2 1/2 years covering the topic, and it shows. We highly recommend it.

[thanks to Reverend Mr. George W. Brooks, Director of Advocacy, Kolbe House in Chicago for the link to this article and for keeping us advised daily of news on the death penalty front. We would never be able to find all these articles on our own. Unfortunately, Rev. Brooks does not have a website. He sends each article out individually.]

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