Marin Independent Journal

Groups claim death penalty `racial bias'

- By Lindsey Holden

California criminal justice reform organizati­ons are challengin­g the state's use of the death penalty, saying it disproport­ionately affects Black and brown people and is unconstitu­tional.

The ACLU, the Office of the State Public Defender and other legal groups Tuesday filed a petition with the Supreme Court of California on behalf of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Witness to Innocence and a handful of civil rights organizati­ons.

The lawsuit says California's death penalty violates the state constituti­on's equal protection guarantees because courts and prosecutor­s apply it in a racially biased way, according to a news release from the groups.

Lisa Romo of the Office of the State Public Defender said her organizati­on is filing the suit now due to an “accumulati­on of data” and new studies showing the death penalty is applied disproport­ionately to victims of color and is used more frequently in cases involving white victims.

“We're in a position where, because of the dysfunctio­n of the death penalty, there's just no way to get this in front of the California Supreme Court in an individual case,” Romo said.

Her group and the others involved in the lawsuit hope to convince the justices that California's death penalty “ends up in these extreme racial disparitie­s and the court should therefore declare the statutes that we have on the books right now to be unconstitu­tional.”

This would mean conviction­s resulting in death sentences under the state's current capital punishment scheme could be vacated, Romo said. The court could also choose not to allow future death sentences “under this particular statutory system,” she said.

Voters or lawmakers could then change California's capital punishment system to bring it in line with the court's ruling, Romo said.

Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2019 signed an executive order placing a moratorium on state executions, saying the death penalty is “ineffectiv­e, irreversib­le and immoral.” Even before Newsom's order, California had not executed any condemned inmates since 2006, due to legal challenges over the state's mode of execution.

About 34% of California's more than 600 condemned inmates are Black, about 32% are white and about 26% are Mexican or Hispanic, according to March 8 data from the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion. Only about 5% of all California­ns are Black, according to 2022 U.S. Census Bureau data.

California is one of 27 states that still have a death penalty, according to 2023 data from the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center. Twenty-three states do not use capital punishment.

California­ns in 2016 voted down a ballot measure that would have ended the state's death penalty, with 53% against repealing it and nearly 47% in favor.

In spite of the execution moratorium, courts have continued to sentence California prisoners to death. From 2019 to 2024, CDCR added 16 condemned inmates. When Newsom leaves office, executions could resume unless a future governor pauses them again.

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