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With Executions Down, Will the Death Penalty Disappear?

After the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, Texas was the first to execute a man by lethal injection.
Filipa Rodrigues
/
KUT
After the death penalty was reinstated in 1976, Texas was the first to execute a man by lethal injection.

Public radio stations from across the state collaborated on this series looking at the death penalty in Texas – its history, how it has changed, whom it affects and its future. 

The death penalty has been slowly on the decline in the U.S. But would it surprise you to know that tough-on-crime Texas has also seen a decline in its use? What could that mean for the future of the penalty here?

If you watch a lot of cop shows and courtroom dramas, you might think capital punishment remains popular. But in reality, public support has waned.

"In the late 1990s, Pew measured support for the death penalty at 78 percent,” Robert Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, said. "Its poll last year placed support for the death penalty down at 49 percent. You're looking at a 29-percentage point decline."

He points beyond that  Pew Research Center national poll to one out of Houston last year.  Rice University's annual survey of attitudes in the city asked people what they thought the appropriate punishment for murder was. Only 27 percent said the death penalty.

Dunham says he thinks the attitudes of people in Harris County provide a good snapshot of attitudes in large urban centers.

"Harris is even more significant because it has produced more death sentences than any other county in the United States, except for Los Angeles," he said.

After the 2016 presidential election, the next question has become: Are the polls right? In this case, Jordan Steiker, who directs the  Capital Punishment Center at the University of Texas School of Law, said there’s pretty good real-life evidence that yes, the death penalty is losing popularity. 

When there are 15,000 to 20,000 homicides a year, but only a couple dozen death sentences, he said, “no one can seriously argue that the death penalty is a significant part of the criminal justice system.”

"It's not a significant part of how we respond to crime. It's not a significant part of how we respond to murder."

Credit Death Penalty Information Center

In 2016, there were only four new death sentences issued in Texas – none from Harris County. Compare that to 1999, when 48 people were sentenced to death.

What changed? A lot – everything from botched executions to inmate exonerations, which weakened public trust. Death penalty cases are also exponentially more expensive than regular murder trials. And starting in 2005, Texas juries were able to consider life without parole instead of death.

Steiker said he believes jurors are more sophisticated now. They take into account the criminal's life before the murder was committed. That includes a much better understanding of mental illness. Take for example, the 2012 mass shooting in an Aurora, Colo., movie theater.

"[There was a] huge loss of life, incomprehensible, terrible crime, but you also had a defendant who also had a very significant mental illness,” he said. “And that prosecution did not produce a death sentence.”

So the death penalty appears to be on its way out. But as long as Texans want to use the death penalty, it won’t go away – so don't get too excited or upset about any bills filed to end capital punishment in the 2017 legislative session or any subsequent session.

Could the courts intervene to eliminate the death penalty? They haven't so far, even when presented with new arguments on whether the  current drug cocktail used to carry out executions is constitutional.

"The Supreme Court hasn't been very welcoming of challenges to the drug protocol,” Steiker said. “The Supreme Court has issued two significant decisions addressing challenges to the use of drugs and the risk of unnecessary pain given particular protocols and has rejected both of those challenges.”

So if the death penalty dies in Texas, it may be in the way many old laws die: They remain on the books, but just aren't used.

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit KUT 90.5.

Ben Philpott covers politics and policy for KUT 90.5 FM. He has been covering state politics and dozens of other topics for the station since 2002. He's been recognized for outstanding radio journalism by the Radio and Television News Directors Association, Public Radio News Directors Incorporated, the Texas Associated Press Broadcasters and twice by the Houston Press Club as Radio Journalist of the Year. Before moving to Texas, he worked in public radio in Birmingham and Tuscaloosa, Ala., and at several television stations in Alabama and Tennessee. Born in New York City and raised in Chattanooga, Tenn., Philpott graduated from the University of Alabama with a degree in broadcast journalism.