In the high-stakes theater of the American legal system, the trial is often sold as a quest for truth. We imagine a defendant standing before a jury of their peers, a fair fight where the burden of proof rests entirely with the state. But for those facing the ultimate punishment, the reality is far darker. The death penalty transforms the legal process into a high-pressure extraction, where the right to a jury trial is often a trap that leads straight to a coercive plea bargain.
DPI’s “What to Know” series examines capital punishment from multiple angles, one topic at a time. Each installment provides essential facts and data on specific aspects of the death penalty. Why it matters : Deterrence is among the most commonly cited justifications for the death penalty, yet decades of research have failed to produce credible evidence that use of the death penalty has an impact on homicide rates. Key Facts: 88% of the nation’s leading criminologists said they did not believe the death penalty deters homicides. Just 9% agreed that “the death penalty significantly reduces the number of homicides.” When states have abolished the death penalty, murder rates have not followed any consistent pattern of change. Rates in states that formerly retained the death penalty follow national trends rather than spiking or falling after abolition.