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Death row study conducted in Florida, Georgia and Texas finds that very few Blacks and no whites receive the death penalty for killing Black people.
1978 (Mar 5)
A study of death row inmates financed by the Southern Poverty Law Center showed that very few Blacks and no whites received the death penalty for the killing of Blacks. In the three southern states surveyed, Florida, Georgia, and Texas, 45 percent of the death row inmates were Blacks who killed whites, while only 5 percent were Blacks who killed Blacks. 50 percent were whites who killed whites. There were no white inmates on death row who killed Blacks. Morris Dees, director of the Poverty Law Center (based in Montgomery, Alabama), claimed that the study "proved that Blacks still make up a far greater proportion of the death row population than are represented in the general population. ... But the real clincher is that death is reserved for those who kill whites." The death penalty study was conducted by William J. Bowers, a Northwestern University professor, who published Executions in America in 1974.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.